Publications

Gordon, Moragh (2020) Bristol <th>, <þ> and <y>: the NorthSouth divide revisited, 1400–1700. In Laura Wright (ed.), The Multilingual Origins of Standard English, pp. 191-214. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter.

Gordon, Moragh, Tino Oudesluijs & Anita Auer (2020) Supralocalisation Processes in Early Modern English Urban Vernaculars: New Manuscript Evidence from Bristol, Coventry and York. International Journal of English Studies (IJES) 20(2): 47-66.

Oudesluijs, Tino & Anita Auer. 2019. Geographical Variation in Late Medieval Administrative Documents: Evidence from York and Coventry. In Merja Stenroos et al. (eds), Essays and Studies in Middle English – 10th International Conference on Middle English, pp. 111-133. Bern: Peter Lang.

Auer, Anita. 2019. Die Stadtsprache Yorks im späten Mittelalter. Ein Baustein zu einer alternativen Standardisierungsgeschichte des Englischen. In Simon Pickl & Stephan Elspaß (eds.), Historische Soziolinguistik der Stadtsprachen. Kontakt – Variation – Wandel, pp. 81-95. Heidelberg: Winter (Germanistische Bibliothek).

Auer, Anita & Mikko Laitinen. 2019. Introduction to Mobility, Variability and Changing Literacies in Modern Times, pp. 13-20. Special Issue of Neuphilologische Mitteilungen.

Auer, Anita. 2019. Linguistic Regionalism in the York Corpus Christi Plays. In Anita, Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall & Tino Oudesluijs (eds.), Revisiting the Medieval North: Interdisciplinary Approaches, pp. 111-122. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.

Auer, Anita, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall & Tino Oudesluijs. 2019. Setting the Scene: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Medieval North of England. In Anita, Auer, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall & Tino Oudesluijs (eds.), Revisiting the Medieval North: Interdisciplinary Approaches, pp. 1-12. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.

Auer, Anita, Denis Renevey, Camille Marshall & Tino Oudesluijs (eds.). 2019. Revisiting the Medieval North of England: Interdisciplinary Approaches. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.

Auer, Anita. 2018. Urban Literacies and Processes of Supralocalisation: A Historical Sociolinguistic Perspective. In Natalie Braber & Sandra Jansen (eds.), Sociolinguistics in England, pp. 13-34. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Oudesluijs, Tino. 2018. Scribes as Agents of Change: Copying Practices in Administrative Texts from Fifteenth-Century Coventry. In M. Tudeau-Clayton & M. Hilpert (eds.), The Challenge of Change (Swiss Papers in English Language and Literature 36), pp. 223-248. Tübingen: Gunter Narr.

Gordon, Moragh. 2017. The Urban Vernacular of Late Medieval and Renaissance Bristol (PhD thesis; ISBN: 978-94-6093-259-5). Utrecht: LOT. FREE FULL-TEXT DOWNLOAD.

Auer, Anita, Moragh Gordon & Mike Olson. 2016. English Urban Vernaculars, 1400-1700: Digitizing Text from Manuscript. In María José López-Couso, Belén Méndez-Naya, Paloma Núñez-Pertejo & Ignacio Palacios-Martínez (eds.),  Corpus linguistics on the move: Exploring and understanding English through corpora (Language and Computers Series 79), pp. 21-40. Amsterdam: Brill/Rodopi.

Auer, Anita & Marcel Withoos. 2013. “Social Stratification and Stylistic Choices in Thomas Dekker’s The Shoemaker’s Holiday (1600)”, in Dirk Delabastita & Ton Hoenselaars (eds.) Multilingualism in the Drama of Shakespeare and His Contemporaries (Special Issue English Text Construction 6.1).