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Book one Content: Chapters 1-3 in Sociolinguistics Chapter 1 in Media Texts E300 has three major components: Sociolinguistics Halliday and Functional Linguistics Discourse Analysis (with a focus on Language and Power) The firts part of the course introduces three major approaches to studying language: The first model: the decontextualized approach This perspective includes: Theoretical Linguistics: views language as an abstract system studied as a set of rules with a focus on correct combinations, independent of context Historical Linguistics: traces the development of language from a historical perspective Structural Linguistics: looks at language as a system that is self contained and can indicate value and meaning of its components through their structural positioning within the system An overview of the contributions of two influential language theorists are included in the first part: Ferdinand de Saussure and his distinction between - synchronic and diachronic approaches to language, and syntagmatic and paradigmatic notions, where syntagmatic notions denote the structural horizontal axis of grammar rules that prescribe the word class of the language item, and paradigmatic vertical axis of relations introducing the synonyms and opening up 1 the field to effectiveness. notions These of will selectivity, be explored appropriateness later in and Halliday’s Functionalism and Fairclough’s language and power pragmatics. Noam Chomsky distinguished between competence and performance, where competence is viewed as the sole criterion in determining linguistic correctness. Chomsky allows only the ideal native speaker (the linguist) and his intuitive knowledge of the rules of the language to be the determining factor in prescribing language rules. Performance is overlooked as full of errors and thus unsuitable to generate linguistic rules. The second model: the contextualized approach This perspective introduces notions on applied linguistics where language is viewed as unabstracted from its context. The sociolinguistics of the second model looks at language in use. Studies from anthropological linguistics and real life contexts emphasize the context-bound language aspect in a reflective approach where language use reflects the properties of its context. The works of William Labov on social class and the pronunciation of prevocalic ® in New York underlines the need to view language practices as part of the social fabric that brings about distinctive features under specific social circumstance. John Gumperz argued through a series of studies that choices of language style or code are directly related to the social situation including speakers, setting and purpose. Issues on gender styles, adolescent styles, in-group styles were cited to bring forward the socialbased approach to language studies. 2 Dell Hymes worked through previous arguments on competence to extend the category to include not only what is linguistically correct but also what is socially appropriate. He used the term Communicative competence to refer to appropriate and socially sensitive exchanges of when to speak, what to speak, to whom and where. The third model: Pragmatics This perspective argues for a more pragmatic approach where language is viewed in a more fluid perspective: not only as reflective of its context but also as constitutive of it. The third model looks at structures as multidimensional where language is conceived of as one aspect in multimodal semiotic signaling. Meanings are negotiated, reconstructed and challenged across dialogues and contexts. Pragmatics looks at the way people create and recreate meaning through language exchanges. Language in this model is seen not just as reflecting but also as constructing the social, ideological, interpersonal and political situations associated with its use. There are two major influences on this third model on language: Foucault and Bakhtin. The third model disrupts ideas on the stability of the social world and the fixivity of language-based idealized exchanges. The three models can be categorized as follows Model One Model Two Model Three Language as an abstract model Language as reflective of the social context Language as negotiated and undetermined 3 Idealized and homogeneous Stable social context and static situation Constructed social context and fluid situation Tutorial # 2 Content: Chapters 4-7 Sociolinguistics Sociolinguistics is the study of language aspects (features, characteristics, styles and variation) in relation to the social context. Pragmatics is the study of language strategies in relation to the goals of the speaker and the social context. There are questions that can frame this interest: In what ways does people’s spoken language vary in different context? What are the social factors that lead people to choose one form of language rather than another? Sociolinguistics involves the description of language features (lexis, phonology, syntax) and an identification of the social factors that lead people to use one form rather than another. The basic framework of sociolinguistic description include: participants setting, topic and function and notions of social distance, formality, status and referential (instrumental) and affective (ideological) functions. When participants, context, topic and function are considered, the use of language variation of different language styles becomes more predictable and meaningful. Domains are contexts where language is used. Diglossia is the linguistic division of labour between two varieties of the same language the high code H-variety is used in formal situations and low code L-variety is used in the informal context. 4 Language shift, language survival of language death are aspects that relate to social, cultural and political issues. Code switching is switching between two languages. This can result from changes in the social situation (situational code switching) or as result of the preference of the speaker and has two functions: the affective function where code switching has dramatic effects (amusements, anger etc). The metaphorical function where each of the two codes is used to represent a set of social indicators (education, status, group membership etc). Lexical borrowing is when a lexical item is borrowed from one language and used in the context (sentence) of another. We call the language where the lexical word is borrowed the Embedded language. We call the language where the embedding occurs the Matrix language. There are syntactic and morphological constraints governing the code switching and lexical borrowing between languages. Shana Poplack proposed two constraints: 1. The free morpheme constraint where only free morphemes can be switched. No switching is allowed between free and bound morphemes. 2. Switching can only occur at equivalent sites of the two languages in order not to disturb the syntactic order of the sentences in the languages involved. 5 Vernacular and standard languages. - The vernacular is an unmodified and unstandardized variety, used in informal situations associated with specific functions (rituals, membership, ethnicity etc). - Standard language: the prestigious variety that emerge as the result of social and political factors and economic influences. In sociolinguistics, the focus includes the characteristics of the variety concerned (the vernacular or the standard) and the activities and social relations linked to its use. (see William Labov’s study (1972) on Black English Vernacular BEV of the African American children). Lingua Franca is the language used for communication between people whose first languages differ. Pidgin is the language that develops as a means of communication between people who do not have a common language. Pidgin languages have no status or prestige. They develop to serve a restricted function and have a short life, e.g. a trading pidgin disappears when the trade between the groups dies out. Creole: a Creole is a pidgin language that has acquired native speakers, i.e. it succeeded into passing to second generation as their native tongue. National and official languages In sociolinguistics the distinction between a national language and an official language is generally made along the affectivereferential dimension or more instrumental dimension. 6 specifically the ideological- A national language is the language of the political cultural and social unit. It is generally developed and used as a symbol of national unity. Its functions are to identify the nation and unite its people, An official language is a language which is used for government business. Its functions are primarily utilitarian rather than symbolic. It is possible of course for one language to serve both functions. Planning for a national official language involves four interrelated stages: Selection: standardizing its structural or linguistic features Elaboration: extending its functions for use in new domains. This involves developing the necessary linguistic resources for handling new concepts and contexts. Implementation: securing its acceptance and use in formal context. Samuel Johnson’s 40,000 word dictionary (1755) was a landmark in the codification of English. Regional and social dialects: Monolingual speakers speak a single language but within this language there is considerable variation in pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar between the users. Linguistic diversity correlates with social diversity. People often use a language to signal their membership of particular groups. Regional variation Pronunciation and vocabulary differences exist between British and American English. There are grammatical differences too. 7 E.g. American English uses ‘do you have’ and ‘did you eat’. British English uses ‘have you got’ and ‘have you eaten’ Differences exist between regions in the same nation. The south may speak a different regional variation from the north, and the urban from the rural. Social variation RP-is perceived as a social accent Particular linguistic features (usually of accent) vary according to identifiable social factors such as the social class of the speakers, their age, education and gender. The main strength of the sociolinguistic approach is its ability to describe and classify variation in urban communities and to make sense of what had appeared to be chaotic and unsystematic linguistic variability. Accents are distinguished from each other by pronunciation alone. Different dialects are distinguishable in pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar. Regional dialects involve features of pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar which differ according to the geographical area of the speakers. Social dialects involve features of pronunciation, vocabulary and grammar which differ according to the social group of the speakers. A social group is determined by a range of features, such as education, occupation, residential area, and income level. 8 People who come from different social groups speak different social dialects: they use different words, pronunciation and grammatical features. Gender and age: - There are gender exclusive speech differences in western and non-western communities. - There are gender-preferential speech features. - Examples include in’ for males and ing for females. In Western societies where women’s and men’s social roles overlap, the speech forms they use also overlap. Women tend to use more standard forms than men. Men use more of the vernacular forms. Research and Explanations: Standard speech forms are generally associated with high class status. Women use more standard speech forms as a way of claiming such status. Woman’s role as guardians of society values. Society tends to expect “better” behavior from women than men especially that they have the role of serving as models for children’s speech. Subordinate groups must be polite By using more standard speech forms women are looking to be valued by the society. Vernacular forms express machismo. Men prefer vernacular forms because connotations of masculinity and toughness. 9 they carry macho This suggests that these forms have convert prestige by contrast with the overt prestige of the standard forms which are cited as models of correctness. Chapter 8: Ethnicity and Social Networks The same group often speaks similarly and therefore has the same or similar linguistic features. These features indicate a person’s social status, gender, age and ethnicity. Where a choice of language is available for communication, it is possible for an individual to signal their ethnicity through specific short phrases, verbal fillers or linguistic tags. Greetings, emphatic phrases, tags and responses are used to signal or emphasize common ethnicity. When an ethnic group adopts the language of the dominant society, an important symbol of their distinct ethnicity, their language, often disappears. Ethnic groups often respond to this situation by using the dominant language in a way which signals its ethnic identity. African Americans do not need a distinctive variety or code as a symbolic way of differentiating themselves from the majority group. They are visibly different. Nevertheless, this group has developed a distinct variety of English known as African American Vernacular English AAVE. This dialect has a number of features which do not occur in standard mainstream American English. These linguistic features act as symbols of ethnicity. They express a sense of cultural distinctiveness for African Americans. One of its most observed features is the complete absence of the copula verb “be” in some social and linguistic contexts: AAVE American SE She very nice He a teacher That my book She’s very nice He’s a teacher That’s my book 10 In recordings of Detroit speech, white Americans never omitted the copula verb “be”, whereas African Americans, especially those from the lower socio economic groups, regularly did. Another distinctive grammatical feature of AAVE is the use of “be” to signal recurring or repeated actions. AAVE American SE She be at school on weekdays She is always at school .... Children do be messing around a lot I run when I bees on my way to school The children do mess around a lot I run when I am on .. There are many features of the English used by lower socio economic groups in the US which also occur in AAVE. Multiple negation was identified as a feature of the English of many lowersocioeconomic groups. It is also a feature of AAVE. AAVE speakers simplify the consonant clusters at the ends of words. They omit the verb “be” and when using it, it has the meaning of habitual or recurrent occurrences. Such consistency in the use of vernacular features of speech indicates correlation between ethnicity and social class on the one hand, and language on the other. In Britain the English of the ethnic minorities generally signal their ethnic background. Ethnicity is not signaled by the speaker’s knowledge of a specific linguistic variety but by the way speakers use the varieties in their linguistic repertoire as symbols of their ethnicity. Patois features are incorporated in the speech of Jamaican British speakers to signal their Black identity. Lexical items such as “lick” to mean “hit” are substituted as ethnicity markers in language. Special features of intonation, like stress, and patterns that differ from those of Standard English are also used 11 as well as the omission of “h” sound in “home”. The substitution of “t” sound by “d” in “then” and “th” sound by “t” in “thin”. Plural forms do not have “s” on the end. Tenses are not marked by suffixes for verbs, so forms like “walk” and “jump” are used rather than “walked” and “jumped”. The form “mi” is used for I, me and my e.g. Mi niem (my name), and “dem” is used for they, them and their, e.g. Dem niem (their name). There are regional varieties of British Black English. The function of these varieties is to act as symbols of ethnicity among British Black people. The term of anti-language is sometimes used for these varieties to mark their function as expressing opposition to the mainstream values of white British Society which exclude Black people and their culture. Social Networks Networks in sociolinguistics refer to the pattern of informal relationships that people engage in on a regular basis. There are two technical terms which have proved very useful for describing different types of networks: density and plexity. Density refers to the degree of interaction between members of the same network. Plexity is a measure of the range of different types of transactions people are involved in with different individuals. A uniplex relationship is one where the link with the other person is in only one area. Multiplex relationships involve interactions with others along several dimensions. People’s speech often reflects the types of networks they belong to. When adults belong to more than one network, they may signal this by unconsciously altering their speech forms as they move from one context to another. The social class background, gender, age, ethnicity as well as contexts and interactive networks are all influences that bear on the language used by speakers. 12 Communities of practice and the construction of social identity Ekhert, an American sociolinguist, uses the term “community of practice” to capture the complexities of what it means to belong to a social group. The concept “community of practice” has been adopted by some sociolinguistics to permit a focus on social categories like these which make more sense to participants than abstract categories such as class and gender. Communities of practice develop around the activities which group members engage in together, and their shared objectives and attitudes. Members may belong to more than one community of practice at the same time, e.g. family, religious community, club, workgroup etc. This perspective highlights the extent to which we use language to construct different identities, in different social interactions and to indicate different affiliations and values. Through using this ethnographic approach, the researcher focuses on the ways in which individuals “perform” particular aspects of their social identities in specific situations. Sociolinguists need to describe the linguistic patterns that correlate with the macro-level abstract categories of class, age, ethnicity and gender to explain the social meaning of language. Individuals use linguistic resources in dynamic and constructive ways to express various social identities. Conclusion Linguists believe that all language varieties are equal. They all have complex structures that serve specific purposes in different situations. They all have resources to develop complex vocabulary and grammar constructions suitable for any occasion. The barriers are social and cultural. Varieties acquire the social status of their users and the divisions of dialects are along racial, ethnic and social lines and follow social hierarchies. 13 Chapter 9: Language Change Languages change occurs over time in areas of spellings, sound and meaning. Speakers and writers change the way they use language. Variation and change Language varies in three major ways which are interrelated: over time, in physical space and socially. Language change, or variation over time, has origins in spatial (or regional) and social variation. The distinctions between “witch” and “which” in pronunciation and “whether” and “weather” are disappearing in some areas in Britain. In meaning, slang words used by young people change the way vocabulary is used. For example to mean “good” a range of words are used, e.g. “wicked”, “cool” and even “bad”. These alternatives are moving from slang into consistent use for young speakers whose mother tongue is English. Sociolinguists try to identify the particular social factors which are responsible for spreading linguistic changes, and then try to explain how they work. In many parts of England and Wales, standard English has lost the pronunciation of (r) in cases where it follows vowels in words like star and start. Post-vocalic (r) does not occur in RP nor in the London **ney dialect any more. The loss of post-vocalic (r) seems to have begun in the 17th century in the south–east of England, and is still in progress. In south west of England, post vocalic (r) is still regularly pronounced. Accents with post vocalic (r) are called “rhotic”. In large areas of England rhotic English accents are regarded as rural and uneducated. In New York, a survey in 1960s found that rhoticism was increasing. In New York rhoticism is regarded as prestigious. Post vocalic (r) is used by almost all New Yorkers. The spread of vernacular forms A pronunciation which is considered prestigious will be imitated and will spread through the community. There are, however, examples 14 of vernacular pronunciations which have spread throughout speech communities. The spread of changes - - From group to group: social factors such as age, status, gender and region affect the rate and direction of the change. Linguistic changes infiltrate groups from the speech of people on the margins between social or regional groups, and have therefore contract with more than one group. From style to style: young people tend to adopt styles of admired peers or the groups they want to be associated with. In New Zealand, a study has shown that some distinctive features of pronunciation are disappearing in the speech of young people, specifically in the area of vowels in word pairs, e.g. “really” and “rarely”. It is more difficult to identify a change when it involves the introduction and spread of a less prestigious form, a vernacular. Language change in real time The apparent-time method of studying language change is a useful frame for sociolinguists who generally cannot afford to wait to report on change. It is also possible to build on the works of earlier linguists when studying change. Young people from Norwich had completely lost the “th” sound in “thing” by 1983 and substituted “th” sound by (f) in words like “thing” and “thin”. Reasons for language change - Social status and language change: The pronunciation of the vowel is “top” and “dog” has changed in Norwich from (ta:p) and (da:g) to RP (top) and (dog). Middle class speakers and specially women have been among the leaders in this change. Lower class speakers, men in particular, often adopt speech forms from nearby local workers to express solidarity, rather than status and prestige. 15 Gender and language change Women tend to be associated with change towards prestige norms, whereas men more often introduce vernacular changes. Women usually lead changes towards the standard, while men introduce new vernacular variants. Interaction and language change Interaction and contact between people is crucial in providing the channels for linguistic change. Face-to-face interaction is crucial for linguistic change. ‘avin a bi’ of bovver is the result of contact with **ney speakers and their glottal stops. Linguists believe that linguistic changes spread through the social networks of individuals. Change will need to have some sort of prestige attached to it, whether overt (expressing social status) or covert (expressing solidarity). Language serves two very basic functions: referential or informative function, and social or affective function. Tracing the progress of a linguistic change through the speech of a community involves considering the influence of a wide range of social factors: social class, age, gender, context and interaction. Chapter 10: Style, Context and Register Language varies according to its uses as well as according to its users. The addressees and the context affects our choice of code or variety, whether language, dialect or style. People vary their language styles to reflect their group membership. These features are sometimes described as stylistic features. Distinctive styles or registers may be shaped by the functional demands of particular situations or occupations. Addressee’s influence on style Addressee is a major influence on the speaker’s style. People vary their language in relation to the person they are addressing and to 16 whether they want to coverage or diverge in their speech to him or her. Many factors contribute to determining the degree of social distance or solidarity between people, relative age, gender, social roles, whether people work together, belong to the same group, social status, etc. Age of addressee People talk differently to children and to adults. Some adjust their speech style or “accommodate” more than others. Social background of addressee The perceived social background of the addressee influences the linguistic features used by the speaker. The simplification of consonant clusters e.g. (la:st) becomes (la:s) and (nekst) becomes (neks) features in speech directed to working class listeners. Evidence of speech variation in relation to audience or addressees comes from the behavior of the same newsreader on different radio stations. The accommodation theory Speech convergence: when people talk to each other their speech becomes more similar. Participants converge to each other’s speech in speech accommodation as a polite speech strategy, using the same pronunciation and vocabulary to signal that they are on the same understanding. How do speakers accommodate? People accommodate to others by selecting the code that is most comfortable for their addressee. Speakers respond to the initiation of a topic by developing it. In the case of interlocutors with lesser proficiency, the speaker converges downwards. In a professional context, the speaker converges upwards. Speech divergence 17 Sometimes respondents deliberately diverge from the speech style and even the language of the person addressing them to indicate disagreement. When the Arab nations issued an oil communiqué to the world, the leaders selected using Arabic not English as the language. This selection was to make a political stand. They did not want to be seen as accommodating the western English speaking powers. The selection of the code matched the political message that they wanted to dispatch. Accommodation problems It is possible to overdo convergence and offend listeners. Overconvergence may be perceived as patronizing and ingratiating, as sycophantic, or even as evidence that the speaker is making fun of the others. Reactions to speech convergence and divergence depend on the reasons people attribute for the convergence or divergence. If divergence is perceived as unavoidable, then the reaction will be more tolerant than when it is considered deliberate. Context, style and class Formal contexts and social roles: Participants relationship influences the content and style of the language that is exchanged between them. Relative status, solidarity social distance and roles are important factors. Choices of the form are influenced not by the personal relationship between the participants only but by the formality of the context and their relative roles within the setting. Different styles: Colloquial style or the vernacular: may be used at specific situations and not others. Social class and style: The interaction between social group membership and style is a feature in language selection. 18 Hypercorrection Hypercorrection usage goes beyond the noun. It involves extending a form beyond the standard. Hypercorrect behavior results from insecurity and attempts to act in a perceived correct way to please. Style in non-western societies: Japanese is one of a number of languages with a special set of grammatical contrasts for expressing politeness and respect for others. The choice of appropriate style involves not only pronunciation but also word forms and syntax. Knowledge of the complexities of stylistic variation reflects a person’s educational level and social status. Relative status must be carefully assessed on every occasions in order to select the correct combination of grammatical forms, vocabulary items and pronunciation – in other words, the appropriate style for the context and the addressee. Register: Register is the kind of jargon which a group of specialists often develop to talk about their specialty, an occupational style that uses specific vocabulary. 1. Syntactic reduction in sports announcer talk is a specific style that involves omitting linguistic elements, the subject noun or pronoun, as these are totally predictable from the context, the referent is unambiguous. 2. Syntactic inversion or reversal of the normal word order is another feature of sports talk to foreground or focus on a specific action. 3. Heavy noun modification is another feature of sports register to focus on people and not action, when the aim is to foreground them. 4. Routines and formulas: registers employ specific routines and formulas to reduce the memory burden on the speaker in oral communication. Conclusion People’s speech not only reflects aspects of their identity such as their ethnicity, age, gender and social background, but also 19 reflects the degree of formality of the contexts in which they are using language as well as the social roles and status of the people within the context of interaction. Stylistic variation accounts for linguistic distinctions between styles. Part I: AN INTRODUCTION TO SOCIOLINUISTICS * STUDENT PRESENTATION OF CHAPTERS 8-10 ________________________________________________ E300 Meeting #4 Tutorial Notes Chapter 11: Speech Functions, Politeness and Cross-Cultural Communication We use language differently in formal and casual contexts. The purpose of talk will also affect its form. Consider the range of functions language may serve and the variety of ways in which the “same” message may be expressed. The concept of politeness: the social dimensions determine what is considered polite in different situations and communities. Being linguistically polite is often a matter of selecting linguistic forms which express the appropriate degree of social distance or which recognize relevant status of power differences. Clearly rules for polite behaviour differ from one speech community to another. Linguistic politeness is culturally determined e.g. appropriate language on gratitude, appropriate greeting, etc. Language serves an affective, or social, function and a referential, or informative, function. There are a number of ways of categorizing the functions of speech: 1. Expressive utterances express the speaker’s feelings e.g. I feel great today. 20 2. Directive utterances attempt to get someone to do something, e.g. clean the table. 3. Referential utterances provide information, e.g. It is nine o’clock. 4. Metalinguistic utterances comment on language itself, e.g. “context” is a sociolinguistic term. 5. Poetic utterances focus on aesthetic features of language, e.g. a poem, a rhythm, etc. 6. Phatic utterances express solidarity and empathy e.g. Hi, how do you do. Phatic communication conveys an affective or social message rather than a referential one. Language is not simply used to convey referential information, but also expresses information about social relationships. Halliday identified a function of language concerned with learning, which he labeled “heuristic” (tell me why function). Other researchers have added categories to deal with promises and threats “commissives”, and with rows, bets and declarations “performatives”. Directives are concerned with getting people to do things. Orders and commands are speech acts which are generally expressed in imperative form. Polite attempts to get people to do something tend to use interrogatives or declaratives (examples on p. 261). Social factors affect a speaker’s choice of the perceived appropriate form: the social distance between participants, their relative status, and the formality of the context. Where status differences are clearly marked and accepted, superiors tend to use imperatives to subordinates indicating the sets of rights and obligations in a role relationship. Formality and status are relevant in choosing an appropriate directive form. To make a directive more polite, the required action is used in a subordinate, embedded, clause in the second part of the declarative sentence, e.g. “I call on the vice chancellor to read the citation.” In general, imperatives are used between people who know each other well, or to subordinates. Interrogatives and declaratives, including hints, tend to be used between people who are less familiar with each other, or where there is some reason to feel the requested taste not part of the routine. 21 It has been noted that females tend to favour more polite and less direct forms of directives than males. Some research go on to suggest that gender differences exist within the same status, e.g. in doctor and patient interactions where female doctors tolerate more interruptions than their male counter parts, use less direct imperatives, e.g. “ may be you could eat less sweets”. Choosing the appropriate linguistic form involves the dimensions of solidarity, social distance, social status, power, etc. The word “please: is used differently by children and adults. In children’s it denotes a polite request. In adult talk it has the effect of making the directive sounds less polite. Intonation and tone of voice are used invariantly for effect. We need to understand the social values of a society in order to speak politely. There are two ways of perceiving politeness: aPositive politeness is solidarity oriented. It emphasizes shared attitudes and values and minimizes status differences. b- Negative politeness includes the use of polite forms that involves expressing oneself appropriately in terms of social distance and respecting status differences. Politeness involved the dimension of formality. In a formal situation the appropriate way will depend on the roles of participants in the context. Address terms, marked context refer to formal settings that are governed by explicit discourse rules. They are culture and contextdependent. Learning another language involves more than learning the literal meaning of the words, how to put them together, and how to pronounce them. There is a need to know their meaning and relevance in the cultural context in which they are normally used. Knowing a language involves knowing how to express a range of speech functions in a culturally appropriate way. E300 tutorial notes Chapter 12: Gender, Politeness and Stereotypes Sociolinguistics is concerned with styles and registers, the way language is used, the relationship between language, thought and culture, and language attitudes. Women and men use language differently, what 22 message does the language used by a specific group convey about their status in the community? While some social dialectologists suggested that women are status conscious and that they use standard speech forms to reflect this aspect, Lakoff, an American linguist, argued that women use the type of language that reinforce their subordinate status. Social dialect research focused on RP pronunciation and syntactic construction. Lakoff shifted the focus of research to gender differences in syntax, semanties and style. She identified a number of linguistic features that expressed uncertainty and lack of confidence, e.g. “uh”, “sort of”, “like”, “urm” (see p. 285). Features of women’s language 1- Lexical hedges or fillers, e.g. you know, sort of, you see, well… 2- Tag questions, e.g. she’s very nice, isn’t she? 3- Rising intonation on declaratives, e.g. it is really good 4- Empty adjectives, e.g. divine, cute, charming. 5- Precise colour terms, e.g. magneta, aquamarine. 6- Intensifiers like so, just e.g. he is so cute. It is just right. 7- Hypercorrect grammar forms. 8- Super polite forms, e.g. “I’m sorry to bother you and I hope I’m not too much trouble but could you move your foot a little either way because somehow mine seems to have got caught under yours” (p.262) 9- Emphatic stress, e.g. It was a BRILLIANT performance. Lackoff identified a number of linguistic features which were unified by their function of expressing “lack of confidence”. ALinguistic devices which are used for hedging, or reducing the force of an utterance. BLinguistic features which may boost or intensify a proposition’s force. Women boost the force of their utterance because they think that otherwise they will not be paid attention to. So, according to Lackoff, both hedges and boosters reflect women’s lack of confidence. Tags may be used as confrontational and coercive devices to force feedback from an uncooperative addressee. Women used more tags than men but they did not use them for the same purpose as men. 23 Many linguistic forms have complex functions. They are used differently in different contexts. They mean different things according to their pronunciation, their position in the utterance, the kind of speech act that they are used for, who is using them to whom in what context. Analyses reveal women as facilitative and supportive conversationalists. Men dominate the talking time with interrupting behaviour and conversational feedback. Occupational status, social class, gender role relations and other social factors account for many interactional patterns. Men and women belong to different cultural groups. Verbal insult for some groups is an established and ritualized activity and serves the function of establishing solidarity and maintaining social relationships, as compliments and agreeing do for women. The construction of gender Approaching gender identity as a construction, rather than as a fixed category is useful when accounting for examples where women adapt to “masculine” contexts, and men adapt to “feminine” contexts. Women in the police force are sometimes advised to portray a masculine image, to wear bulky sweaters suggesting upper-body strength, and well-worn boots to suggest that they are used to hard work. They also adopt a cool distant style, they don’t smile much and they talk tough. Men who work in clothing shops or hair dressing salons, on the other hand, often construct a more “feminine” identity in these contexts. They use features of the more cooperative style associated with “gossip”, use affectionate terms of address and encourage the addressee to talk. Narratives are means of constructing particular gender identities. Approaching the construction of gender as a process, rather than as a given category, leads to a view on individuals as constantly doing gender. This approach encourages a view that every linguistic and non linguistic choice is meaningful. Sexist Language 24 Can a language be sexist? The study of a sexist language is concerned with the way language expresses both negative and positive stereotypes of both men and women. Can a language contribute to the maintenance of social inequalities between men and women? There are a number of ways in which it has been suggested that the English language discriminates against women: through the vocabulary and imagery of the language. The male form is the unmarked form, the norm. The use of additional suffix the signal “femaleness” is seen as conveying the message that women are deviant or abnormal. English renders women invisible in the use of generic forms like “man” or “he”. This is no longer acceptable because the generic meaning has become overshadowed by the masculine meaning. Linguistic categories are one source of evidence on a culture’s values. Once these views are encoded it takes considerable time and effort to alter the language, even when the social attitudes reflected are slowly changing. E300 tutorial notes Chapter 13: Language, Cognition And Culture Dominant social stereotypes indicate people’s thinking habits. The way a person speaks generally signals social information about their background. A person’s ethnicity, age, and gender are also reflected in their linguistic choices. Sociolinguists who adopt a social constructionist approach argue that language not only reflects and expresses membership of social categories, it also contributes to the construction of the social identity. We choose to portray ourselves according to the linguistic features we use. Language and perception 25 Language reflects the social context in which it is produced. It also conveys a worldview or perspective which may affect the perceptions of individuals. Can language determine the way we perceive reality? Deborah Cameron uses the term verbal hygiene to describe how people attempt to use language precisely and appropriately in different situations and registers. Language reflects society’s perceptions of particular groups through labeling that has positive and negative connotations. Sapir-Whorf Studies have suggested that there is a close relationship between language and perception. Do categories of language pre-determine what we can think about or conceive of? Do the categories we learn to distinguish as we acquire language provide a framework for ordering the world? The relationship between language, thought and reality has fascinated linguists and philosophers for centuries. Benjamin Lee Whorf and later Edward Sapir suggested that particular words selected to describe or label objects often influence people’s perception and behavior. “We dissect nature along lines laid down by our native languages. The world is presented in a kaleidoscopic flux of impressions which has to be organized in our minds, and this means largely by the linguistic systems in our minds. We cut nature up, organize it into concepts and ascribe significance as we do, largely because we are parties to our agreement to organize it in this way, an agreement that holds throughout our speech community and is codified in the patterns of our language”. Linguistic determinism: The medium is the message The strong interpretation of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is generally labeled linguistic determinism. This holds that people from different cultures think differently because of differences in their languages. 26 Few sociolinguists would accept such a strong claim. But most accept the weaker version on linguistic relativism; that language influences perception, thought, and at least potentially behaviour. Research testing this claim with experiments on colours and shapes confirmed that categories provided by a language make it easier to draw on conceptual distinctions. The categories provided by a language may favour certain ways of perceiving “reality” or “the world”. Grammar and cognition Grammatical categories such as tense, aspect and gender encode aspects of reality differently in different languages. Whorf’s analysis of the Hopi verb system led him to argue that the Hopi conception of time is fundamentally different from Western cultures. Hopi verbs require an analysis of events in terms of dynamic motion. Hopi does not have tenses and words for time units. Whorf’s detailed claims do not hold up but sociolinguists consider his general argument an interesting one, with implications for the way speakers of different languages and cultures “filter” or “cut up” reality. To what extent then does culture intersect with language and cognition. Linguistic categories and culture Native American and Australian Aboriginal Languages are often cited to refute popular misconception about primitive societies that “simple societies can’t have complex grammar”. A native American Language, Kwakiutl, requires a grammatical classification of nouns based on whether they are visible or not. Aboriginal Language, Dyirbal, has four classification for every noun, based on semantic associations. Myth and cultural beliefs influence class allocation. Also at the lexico-grammatical level Aboriginal languages challenge western preconceptions about primitive languages, e.g. Wallaby and Kangaroo. 27 This suggests an alternative to Whorf’s position. Rather than language determining what is perceived, it is rather the physical situation and socio-cultural environment which determines the distinctions that the language develops. From this perspective, language provides a means of encoding a community’s knowledge, beliefs and values, i.e. its culture. Kinship labels are among a range of lexical labels used to identify social rights and obligations between members of a culture. Language, social class and cognition Basil Bernstein studied possible cognitive implications where groups use different varieties of a language. Bernstein tested the language of working class children where they were shown a series of events in photos and asked to describe what they saw. The children used short, monosyllabic responses. In the interview this performance was viewed as “restricted” in terms of the linguistic resources. Bernstein went further. He suggested that a “restricted code” might constrain the cognitive abilities of those who use it. In other words, he was extending the principle of linguistic determinism. He argued that the language children use might affect what they were capable of perceiving and even their thinking abilities. The hypothesis had great appeal as a way of accounting for working class children failure in school. It placed the blame on the children and their language rather than on the schools’ failure to adequately identify their educational needs. Bernstein’s hypotheses forced sociolinguists to examine Whorf’s claims about the relationship between language, thought and society really thoroughly. His research appeared to support a view on working class children as linguistically deprived, and their use of vernacular forms as evidence of cognitive deficit. Conclusion There are various ways in which language, thought and culture interrelate. Most sociolinguists agree that language influences perceptions of reality. There is little doubt that consistent use of pejorative terms for a group, for instance, affects people’s perception of that group’s members, e.g. Slave (black in Arabic). 28 There is also psycholinguistic evidence that the existence of particular categories in a language way predispose speakers to classify reality in one way rather than the other, e.g. Freedom fighter or terrorist. The physical and cultural environment in which language develops influences the vocabulary and grammar of a language. E300 tutorial notes Chapter 14: Attitudes and Applications Attitudes to language The issue of whether “r” should be pronounced or not in English is a good example of the arbitrariness of the linguistic features. There is nothing intrinsically good or bad about [r] pronunciation. In some communities it is regarded as an example of “good speech” and in others as evidence of lack of education. Attitudes to language reflect attitudes to users and uses of language. Attitudes to language are strongly influenced by social and political factors. Overt and covert prestige The standard variety in a community has overt prestige. Covert prestige refers to positive attitudes towards vernacular or nonstandard speech varieties. The local accent is the only possible way of speaking to friends, work mates and family. It expresses group identify and solidarity. Overtly negative attitudes to non-standard varieties of English, e.g. Patois and Creole reflect the depressed social position of the West Indian people in Britain rather than features of the language itself. Attitudes to Standard English and RP Standard English has an enormous legacy of overt prestige. It has been regarded as a symbol of British nationhood. For well over a century, it has been promoted as the only acceptable variety for use in all official 29 domains, including education. By comparison, vernacular dialects of English are down graded. Support for grammar teaching derives from an association of grammar with authority, hierarchy, tradition and elitism, order and rules. The standard dialect is primarily a socially defined entity, not a linguistically defined one. Standard English is the English used by educated people with relatively high social status. Oral Presentation on Chapters 11 - 14 (selected students) __________________________________________________ _________ E 300 Tutorial Notes on Meeting # 5 Approaches to language studying can be categorized under three general models. The first approach focuses on the material substance of language. Language, in this perspective is conceived of as being autonomous, consisting of entities called phonemes, morphemes, clauses and sentences. By establishing a concern for material form, the human experience of communication is made more concrete and therefore manageable as an area of study. By structuring the study around the set entities of language, the first model can be referred to as the structuralist model. This has been the dominant model of language description in Western thought for many centuries. The second approach arose in the middle of the twentieth century, partly as a reaction to the “pure” linguistic approach. Model 2 does not abandon structuralism but put forward the argument that linguistic structure alone cannot explain meaning. An account of social context is also required. Model 2 includes sociolinguistic and ethnographic studies. Model 3 can be loosely labeled post modern. It represents an attempt to understand the fragmentary flux of language not by 30 idealizing simple underlying mechanism but by attempting to tease apart and understand the nature of the fragmentation. It conceptualizes language and the ways in which it conceives of society and individual identity. In post modern approaches there are no clear-cut boundaries between language and other forms of human communication. Post-modernists advocate holistic approaches with a view to dynamic unstable realities. Language, from postmodernist view, is diverse and unstable in structure, e.g. architecture as a form of communication. Model one: Structuralism In the twentieth century, two scholars have been of pre-eminent importance in developing modern linguistic theory. The first is the Swiss Ferdinand de Saussure and his “course in general linguistics”, and the second is the American Noam Chomsky and his seminal work, “Syntactic structures”. Both linguists contributed to the structuralist stand in their attempt to describe, analyze and explain the complex FORM of language from a view that sees it as an autonomous mechanism. Pre-Saussurean Structuralism In the seventeenth century, the English philosopher John Locke sets out a semiotic theory concerning human understanding. Locke conceives of communication as a system of “signs”: words are the signs of ideas, ideas are signs of things. The relation of the word to the idea is an arbitrary one. Locke argued that the primary function of language is communication. Many of the post-renaissance scholars who published on grammar and language in Britain were also scientists. This brought closer the investigation of science and more general linguistic enquiry. During the eighteenth century grammar books and dictionaries that helped ascertain and standardize the English language appeared, e.g. Samuel Johnson’s dictionary. During that period approaches to language study matched approaches to science study. Texts and utterances were seen as the compounds, in chemistry for example, constructed of elements and arranged in characteristic patterns of combination. 31 In the nineteenth century, Language was viewed as a living organism with a course of development of its own: it is formed, develop and die out. Linguists even began to talk about the “struggle for survival” amongst languages in competition. By this time language study was an historical enterprise rather than a comparative one. Languages were theorized as evolving and changing over time. By the end of the nineteenth century the metaphore of language as a natural organism was phased out. This stemmed from a growing awareness that languages do not change on their own, but follow the circumstance of their speakers. Saussure and Structuralism. Saussure distinguishes between historical or diachronic approach to language studies, and the study of language at a particular point in time or synchronic approach. Synchronic approaches can account for the ways language works at a particular interval in time. Saussure regards language as a system of elements which conveys meaning through two basic mechanism. First, the meaning is arbitrarily assigned to an element (here, the word) through social contract between speakers of a particular speech community to interpret the element (the word) in a particular way, giving use to decoding the intended meaning. Second, the meaning of elements are interpreted as well as modified through a mechanism of binary opposition, so what is man is not woman, old is not young and so on. The conventions of language that form the social contract on meaning and interpretation are called La Langue, the actual speech is called La Parole. Post-Saussurean Structuralism European Linguistics (Saussure is a Swiss Linguist) was taken to America by Leonard Bloomfield and applied to the study of American Indian Languages. Bloomfield was keen to establish linguistics as a science. In 1920s and 1930s the dominant model in human sciences was that of BEHAVIOURISM, the doctrine that only OBSERVABLE human behaviour could be used as data when constructing theory. In linguistics, such an approach stressed the need for rigorous methodology in data collection. Analysts, however, worked on language alienated from context. This abstraction of text from context limited the analysis to descriptivism that is void of meaning. Meaning was not an area of 32 interest for Behaviourists. It was mentalistic and inaccessible to observation. For Bloomfield, in order to understand the meaning of an utterance, one had to investigate scientifically the properties of the objects being referred to. Noam Chomsky reacted strongly to this narrow conception of “structuralism without meaning”. He argued that going to the field to collect a corpus of utterances was a fatally flawed enterprise. It would result in a very limited range of structures which the investigator happened to record during his brief fieldwork. The data would be polluted with numerous errors. The collected data would not reflect the real grammar of the language but rather the incidental effects of the non-linguistic real world such as lapses of memory, interruptions and slips of the tongue. For Chomsky, the “language” which was the object of study was not empirically directly accessible. The language that Chomsky was interested in studying, consisted of every possible sentence which a speaker, competent in the language, could possibly ever utter. Chomsky argued that the use of intuition and introspection can be employed by the ideal native speaker of the language (the linguist) to make judgments about the grammaticality of an utterance. Chomsky distinguished between competence (the underlying knowledge of grammar which every speaker possesses) and performance (the inconsistent use that speakers make of this knowledge in the real world). Chomsky’s work marked a major departure for linguistic theory in the United States. It shifted the emphasis to syntax and sought universals of language structures. Sentences or parts of sentences became “strings” which underwent transformations. Chomskyan grammar looked like structuralism but with a new flavour. language as seen by Chomsky consists of a system of rules or principles which guide the construction of sentences. Language remains, from Chomskyan perspective, an autonomous mechanism whose structure can be described and analysed independently of the social context of its use. Corpora collected for computer databases reflected this alignment in the exclusion of spoken materials in earlier corpora. Structuralism in literary theory, cultural studies and anthropology 33 Saussure located language as one among many kinds of sign system. “Semiology would show what constitutes signs, and what laws govern them”. MODEL ONE As an ideology of Language Model 1 aims to identify an idealized system As a theory of communication Model 1 embodies the idea that human communication works by transferring ideas from the mind of the speaker to the mind of the listener (signifier →signified →decoding) through what was termed “telementation fallacy”. Obstacles hampering correct decoding are attributed to either noise interrupting signaling process, or different algorithms used by the recipient. Concepts on the language user Model 1 perceives the language user as an idealized person who knows his language perfectly and is operating in a homogeneous speech community. No consideration is given to diversity or conflict by either Saussure or Chomsky. Locke conceives of the language user as an individual who “acts voluntarily in acts of utterance”, in other words, who makes choices: “every man has …a liberty to make words stand for what ideas he pleases”. MODEL TWO: SOCIOLINGUISTICS Structuralists have imagined that under the messiness of real life experiences lies an ideal form. Idealisation focuses on structures and assumes that context and social process are of marginal interest. Throughout the twentieth century, there have existed alternative traditions of language study which reject the idea of an autonomous language mechanism. Early Anthropological linguists 34 This tradition started in North America with linguists like Boas setting out to describe the native languages of North America. This project required the training of numerous field workers. From this enterprise arose an important principle of relativism: languages were diverse and that none was structurally superior or inferior. Edward Sapir, a student of Boas, argued for the necessity of viewing language as inextricable from its culture: “Language does not exist apart from culture, that is, from the socially inherited assemblage of practices and beliefs that determines the texture of our lives”. Britain’s emerging tradition of language study also had anthropological roots. One of the major figures was Malinowski, who studied the culture of Trobriad Islanders in the Pacific Ocean. Malinowski argued that to speak, in a primitive culture, is not to tell, but to do. “In its primitive use, Language functions as a link in concerted human activity—It is a mode of action and not an instrument of reflection”. In other words, language use, in primitive societies, is related to activities in the immediate context, not to reflect, recall or comment on things that are out of sight. Malinowski identified three main functions in the “language of the savages”: 1- To realize action 2- To express social and emotive functions (feelings of togetherness of society) 3- To establish bonds of sentiments, in gossip, This he turned Phatic Communion. For Malinowski, utterances become comprehensible only in the context of the whole way of life in which they form part. The focus of analysis is not on the sentence but on the “speech event in a context of situation”. Sociolinguistics in the USA The ethnographer Dell Hymes argued that the cultural knowledge needed by speakers to talk in socially appropriate ways is what is needed in communicative competence. 35 William Labov in his quantitative methodology examined the relationship between language and social context, correlating details of pronunciation with the speaker identity and formality of situation. Sociolinguistics in the UK The tradition in UK began at the University of London. Malinowski was Professor of linguistics at the University of London. Firth was also a prominent academic at the University of London and so was Halliday. Halliday recognized the importance of Malinowski’s work and was a student of Firth. Halliday built a formal model that showed how language and context were interlinked in the production of meaning. The context of situation, for Halliday, can be described in terms of three parameters: Field : The activity and the language forms related to it, in terms of participants, processes and circumstance. Tenor: The roles and status relationships between participants, and the language forms related to this as well as the social functions of the utterance. Mode: The channel of communication, spoken, written, telephone or face-to-face, and the rhetorical devices associated with each mode. Registers or diatypic varieties derive from the range of uses that language serves in a particular culture or subculture. MODEL 2 As an ideology of language Model 2 recognises varieties and look at standard language as one among many dialects. Distinction between varieties has to do with the social and political contexts in which they are used. As a theory of communication Model 2 sees meaning as arising from an interaction between language and social context. The same linguistic structure used in different social contexts of use will carry different 36 meanings. Text is the central object of study. It encodes not just ideas but also the social context and social relations between participants. An important part of communication in sociolinguistic theory is the choice, by a speaker. Concepts of the language user Society is seen as containing well-defined social groups ordered along lines of ethnicity, social class, gender and age. An individual’s social identity is defined in terms of membership to such groups. Sociolinguistics thus appeals to a structuralist model of society and adds it to structural description of language varieties. The British sociolinguist Robert Le Page asserts, “the individual creates his system of verbal behaviour so as to resemble those common to the group or groups with which he wishes from time to time to be identified”. MODEL THREE: POSTMODERNISM Postmodernism advocates no absolute static reality. The cosmos becomes a different place depending on the position adopted by the observer. Postmodernist theory looks at language from a view that it is in constant flux, reflecting and constructing changing realities. Postmodernism takes a broader semiotic view to language. The concern is with signs not words, and the signifying practices. In pursuit of human communication, the boundary between language and non-language is blurred. Postmodern theories are concerned pre-eminently with texts. Texts are not internally homogeneous entities. They are produced by processes in which relations of power and social role apply. Model 3 As an Ideology of Language 37 Ideas and assumption on fixed roles and entities are rejected by post modern theory. As a theory of communication In post modern theory communication is precarious. Meaning arises from interaction with context and the social activities of the participants. Different hearers or readers will respond differently to the same material in a text, according to their ideological status and position in the world. Meaning in postmodern theory is not fixed but provisional and subject to further negotiations, specially in relations of power. Texts, within the post modern model, are nor simply read and understood, but consumed, used, exploited and a site for struggle. A text will take on a different life, new functions and new meanings, according to the social activities in which it is embedded. Conceptions of the language user The post modern language user is often described as a “speaking subject”. Subjectivity is not given by their membership of well-defined social groups but is constructed through discourse, the every day experience of language interaction. Book two: Part II: Halliday and functional linguistics E300 Meeting #6 Tutorial Notes THE FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF LANGUAGE Preliminaries Grammar and meaning For Halliday, language is a system of meaning. When people use language, their language acts as the expression of meaning. The grammar becomes a study of how meanings are built up 38 through the use of words and other linguistic forms such as tone and emphasis Linguistic choice Halliday’s explanation of how language works involves the idea that a language consists of a set of systems, each of which offers the speaker or writer, a choice of ways of expressing meaning : the interrogative form, the declarative form, the imperative form as well as choices in the syntagmatic and paradigmatic orders. Language in use Language in use is influenced by the complex elements from the specific situation. The situation also influence the interpretation and expression of meaning within the same register, for example. A letter to a friend is different in content and style from a business letter. The study of texts Halliday insists on studying real life texts. Communication is an interactive process through which meaning is negotiated. In Halliday’s view, a grammar that was only satisfactory for the analysis of individual sentences would be incomplete. We need a grammar that can also account for texts, and language parts that are longer than a sentence. The choice of words and the word order of one sentence often depends on the language part that preceded it. The linguistic analysis can help us to find out why some texts are more effective than others. The notion of rank The meaning of the text is constructed out of its component parts: sentences, clauses and words. Hallidayan linguists employ the notion of rank. A sentence consists of one or more groups, a group consists of one or more words and a word consists of one or more morphemes. Each of these ranks refer to a unit of meaning. The clause and its constituents allow us to express ideas. Functions and metafunctions 39 The functional approach to grammar is concerned with language in use. Grammatical functions: in a lexico grammar, each element (word or group or clause) has to be seen as part of the system of the language e.g. syntactic positioning, form etc. The communicative function Halliday makes the point that the relationship between the forms of utterances and the types of meaning they can express is a complex one which is based on the principle what speakers say makes sense in the context in which they are saying it. Language is organized around a small number of “functional components” which correspond to metafunctions. Metafunctions have a systematic relationship with the lexicogrammar of the language. Metafunctions 1- The ideational function can be classified into two subfunctions: the experiential and the logical. The experiential relates to the experience or ideas. The logical function relates to the relationship between ideas. 2- The interpersonal function relates to the roles, attitudes and judgments. 3- The textual function relates to the use of language to organize the text itself. In any instance of language use all three metafunctions operate simultaneously in the expression of meaning. Chapter 2: Labels Labels are technical terms. o o o Word classes : a set of categories for classifying words. Parts of speech is the old term. Word classes: nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns, prepositions, conjunctions, articles and/or interjections. Hallidayan grammar also features eight word classes: nouns, adjectives, numerals, determiners, verbs, prepositions, adverbs and conjunctions Nouns: Common nouns, proper nouns and pronouns Pronouns: are closed set of items: no additions or transformations. 40 Personal pronouns: I, me Possessive pronouns: my, mine Wh-pronouns: who, whom, which, what, whose. o Verbs: Halliday lists three basic subclasses: lexical, auxiliary and finite. The finites and auxiliaries are closed sets. Lexical verbs are an open set. A significant subset of finites is the set of modal auxiliaries or modals: could, can, may, might, shall, will, would… o Adjectives: are modifiers of nouns or the head of a group that is complement of a copular verb (i.e after copular) o Determiners: a more comprehensive category than article. o Numerals o Adverbs: are characterized by the morphological feature- ly, e.g. Clearly, cleverly, sadly,… o o Prepositions Conjunctions: linking conjunctions or coordinators (and, but, for, or) binding conjunctions (because, whenever, until, before, after, whether, although). Chapter 3: The subject and related functions The subject is realized by a Nominal Group. o Apposition: is when there is a substitute in meaning, e.g. the subject of the first clause is substituted by the personal name in the second (referring to the same entity) o Subject-finite agreement: a change of number or person in the subject may coincide with a change of number in the verb. Texts written predominantly in the present tense offer more examples of explicit subject-verb agreement. o Question-tag: the subject of the main clause is reflected in the tag. o Passive clauses: passive clauses are, in a sense, an inverted form of corresponding active clauses. 41 o Empty subjects: or dummy subjects, eg. There, it. Such dummy subjects are sort of stand-in holding the subject position until the subject comes along. The postponed structure is an embedded clause. We analyze the dummy subject and the embedded clause together as making up the subject. o Finites and predicators Verbal groups realize the function of finite (F) and predictor (P). In simple verbal group, the finite and predicator are said to be fused. In the case of non-fused Finites and Predicators, e.g. had written, was known. The first part is the finite, carrying the agreement and the second is the predicate. Verbal groups can contain up to five words, not counting the negative polarity element not or the particles e.g. slow down. An example of a five part verbal group: It might have been being written during that period. In such instance the first element realizes the finite function while the rest of the verbal group realizes the Predicator function. o Negatives and interrogatives Where the positive declarative contains a separate Finite and predicator, the negative counterpart is identical except that not is present immediately after the finite. Interrogatives likewise have a fairly straight forward systematic correspondence with declaratives in that the finite and the subject are inverted. o Mood: Halliday divides the clause into two parts: the Mood and the Residue. The mood is made up of the subject and Finite; the residue is the rest of the functions of the clause.(Predicator, complement and adjuncts). o Direct object complement follow transitive verbs. Intransitive verbs occur with or without an object complement. Most verbs in English seem to function both transitively and intransitively, with or without a complement. A complement which follows a copular verb is called an intensive complement: she is a brilliant woman. Some verbs allow two object complements : a direct object complement and an indirect object complement. The verbs that allow indirect object complements are called 42 ditransitive verbs. Typical ditransitive verbs are : give, send, offer. Most linguists do not label a to-phrase as an indirect object. They prefer for it the term adjunct (joined to). Eg. John sent 120 flowers to me. The same is true of for-phrase John sent 120 flowers for me. o Adjuncts: Adjuncts fall into three subtypes: circumstantial, conjunctive and modal, corresponding to three macrofunctions: the ideational, textual and interpersonal respectively. Circumstantial adjunct: information about time or place, circumstances of the events or states described in the text. Most typically they are realized by prepositional phrases or adverbs. Circumstantial adjuncts express information about the circumstance of the process : they convey information about such matters as place, time, manner. They are part of the ideational meaning of the clause. Conjunctive adjuncts show the link between this clause and what precedes it (conjunctive adjuncts). Modal adjuncts: indicate some aspect of the speaker/writer’s attitude, eg. Normally, for a while, repeatedly, or degree of commitment eg. Probably, possibly, conceivably. Adjuncts and conjunctions. Adjuncts are realized by prepositional phrases, adverbial groups and sometimes nominal groups. They are not realized by conjunctions. Conjunctions are a word class within the same system as noun, verb, adjective, adverbs, determiner, preposition and numeral. Adjunct is a function in the clause and is realized by such word classes as adverbs and nominals as well as by prepositional phrases. The conjunction but indicates adverse relations. The adverb however serves as a conjunctive adjunct in linking two separate sentences, e.g. He remembered writing something important but he could not decipher his scrawl. Or 43 He remembered writing something important. However he could not decipher his scrawl. Conjunctive Adjunct (adverb) Conjunction Moreover, furthermore and However, nevertheless but, yet Alternatively whereas or, Thus, therefore, consequently so that There are five clause functions, covered here, subject (S), finite (F), predicator (P), complement (C) and adjunct (A). Part II: Halliday and functional linguistics THE FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH (Chapters 4-6) E300 Meeting #7 Tutorial Notes The Functional Analysis of English Chapter 4: Information Structure and Thematic Structure An aspect of functional grammar is the way information is structured in communication. We organize what we say in a way that will make it easier for the interlocutor to understand. Spoken language is of two types: prepared speech and unprepared speech. Prepared speech has many shared characteristics with the written language, e.g. public speaking, political address. Unprepared speech occurs mostly in conversations. At a closer glance, we find that we consciously or subconsciously impose structure on our speech as part of the act of a communication. 44 In Hallidayan grammar, there are two parallel and interrelated systems of analysis that concern the structure of the clause. The first of these is called Information Structure and involves constituents that are labeled Given and New. The second is called Thematic Structure and involves constituents that are labeled Theme and Rheme. Information Structure: Given and New information An independent clause is a clause that can stand alone as a complete sentence. Given and New information can be found in both dependent and independent clauses and in combinations of the two. In order to communicate effectively the speaker must bring to the hearer’s attention some elements of shared or mutual knowledge. This shared information is usually found at the beginning of the clause and is labeled Given information. Most clauses also include information that is the focus of the message, New information. The two elements, the Given and the New, make up an information unit. This consists of the Given, which is optional, and the New, which is obligatory. With the exception of the imperative, all the clauses have Given elements that are referentially linked either to the interlocutor or the previously mentioned elements the conversation. Where a speaker or writer constructs a clause where Given information is placed first and New information come second, the clause is said to be unmarked. This is a matter primarily of intonation, the way in which the different levels of pitch (or tone) are used in the language to express meaning. In an unmarked declarative clause, the New information is said to have the most communicative dynamism and is signaled intonationally by a falling tone. Thematic structure: Theme and Rheme Thematic structure is similar to information structure and in many clauses there is a parallel equivalence between theme and Given on one hand and Rheme and New on the other. 45 Theme in English is the idea represented by the constituent at the starting point of the clause, the point of departure of the message. A clause begins with a realization of the theme. This is followed by the realization of the Rheme, which can be explained as being the rest of the message. The topical theme represents the topic of the discourse: a participant, circumstance or process. The topical theme is realized by one of the following elements: Subject, Predicator, Complement or Circumstantial Adjunct. In some interrogative clauses, the Finite precedes the Subject and hence can be theme, but in such case it will not be a topical theme. Nominal Groups as theme When a subject is in theme position in a declarative clause it is said to be unmarked. Interrogatives, imperatives and exclamations Consider the examples: 1- Had he written down something of importance? 2- What had he written down? The starting point of the clause is different in interrogative clauses. The Theme-Rheme structure is also different. The theme in the first interrogative is realized by the finite Had and the Subject together, in this case Had he. In the second interrogative the theme is realized by the word what. Consider now the following examples: 1- Write it down 2- What neat writing you’ve got! 3- How sweetly she sings! MOOD Declarative Interrogative Imperative Exclamative THEME realized by Subject Finite + Subject Predicator Wh-word complement 46 Or Wh-word Adjunct. Marked theme in declarative clauses The theme is said to be unmarked where the subject is the starting point of the clause. In cases where other elements are found in theme position, the theme is said to be marked. The most common element to appear as marked theme is the circumstantial Adjunct. Consider the examples: 1After the war, the Spartans erected a memorial in the battle field. 2For a long time, the Spartans proved themselves invincible on land. Theme is realized by the prepositional phrases which are acting as circumstantial adjuncts. The writer could have put each of these adjuncts at a later position in the clause. This flexibility allows the writer to select the initial position. A more unusual case of marked theme, occurs where the first constituent in the clause is the complement. Complements usually follow the verb in declarative sentences, but occasionally, for special effects, they come in theme positions, e.g. Poetry, where there is a stylistic intent in fronting. The themes in all the marked examples so far are part of the ideational element of the clause, which is to say that they tell us something about the world the writer is describing. Multiple themes Some clauses have more than one theme. They have multiple thematic structure. Every clause has a theme which relates to the ideational function of language. This is the theme which represents what the clause is about, the topic of the clause, and hence the name Topical theme. In addition to the Topical theme, some clauses also have Textual and/or Interpersonal themes. When speakers in a conversation, use expressions like well, or oh, they are using a Textual theme. When speakers address 47 listeners directly, by using a name or a term of affection, they are using an Interpersonal theme. Well Children The Story Textual theme Interpersonal theme Topical theme 48 Is about to begin Rheme Morning Interpersonal Theme Oh yes Textual theme so Textual theme ladies and gentlemen Interpersonal theme last tutorial Topical theme I Topical theme We talked about democracy Rheme Dropped your case Rheme some of the comments Topical theme are valid Rheme It is possible to analyze clauses for both their Given – New structure and for their Theme – Rheme structure. It is usually the case that the Given element is the same as the Theme, but not necessarily always. In Imperative clauses, for example, we draw a distinction between Theme and Given. (You) Given (You) Given Have Theme some bread Rheme New don’t touch the sandwich New Topical theme Rheme The use of intonation helps place emphasis and locate New information in theme position. Chapter 5: Grammar and Text Text and Texture The grammar of English allows speakers and writers to structure information within the clause by making use of two patterns: 1- The Theme and Rheme system of the clause, and 2- The combination of Given and New information units. 49 The thematic choices made by the language user can help to make a text coherent. Cohesive devices are combined with structural elements to give a sense of continuity to discourse. The textual component of the grammar Halliday identifies the textual component (texture) as consisting of features associated with two groups of resources: the structural and the cohesive. Structural component Given and New information: the information structure and focus. Theme and Rheme: the thematic structure. Cohesive Component 1- Reference 2- Ellipsis and Substitution 3- Conjunction 4- Lexical Cohesion The logical progression of the information through the text is helped both by the thematic structure and the use of the devices: reference, ellipsis, conjunction and lexical cohesion. The constant theme pattern (same reference case) The constant pattern, where a common theme is shared by each clause and where this theme equates with the Given information, is common to short passages and descriptions of factual information focusing on a particular thing or concept. The Linear Theme pattern The Linear pattern is when the Rheme of one clause is taken up as the theme of the subsequent clause. The Split Rheme pattern The Split Rheme pattern occurs when the Rheme of a clause has two components each of which is taken in turn as the theme of the subsequent clause: Derived themes 50 Derived themes is the term used to describe expressions in theme position which are cohesively linked in meaning, but not necessarily in form, to a topic which has been stated earlier in the text or the overall topic of the paragraph. Cohesive ties Cohesive ties can be classified into four main types: Reference: Reference can be cohesive when two or more expressions in the text refer to the same person, thing or idea. An essential characteristic of cohesive reference is that, on second and subsequent mention, the person or thing referred to is not named but is indicated by means of a pronoun, demonstrative (this, these) or comparative term. When readers or listeners come across a pronoun or determiner, they are forced to mentally identify the linked nominal in order to make sense of the text. This has a very strong cohesive force. References can be endophoric references, i.e. to reference things within the text. These have a cohesive function. There are the non-cohesive exophoric references, i.e. references to things outside the text Eudophoric references are further divided into cataphoric (forward pointing) references, e.g. look at this, a beautiful cat. Anaphoric references (back ward looking), e.g. Armstrong went to the moon. He was the first man to walk on the moon. In terms of grammatical realization there are three main types of cohesive reference: personal reference, demonstrative and comparative reference. Personal reference is dependent on the use of personal pronouns. Possessives are also referential and can be used as Modifier or Head in a Nominal Group. Demonstrative reference is dependent on the use of Determiners (this, these, that and those) and adjuncts (here, now, then, there) and comparative reference uses adjectives like (same, other, identical, better, more) or their adverbial counterparts (identically, similarly, less) and so on, to forge links with previously mentioned entities. Substitutions and ellipsis 51 * Substitution is used where a speaker or writer wishes to avoid the repetition of a lexical item and is able to draw on one of the grammatical resources of the language to replace the item. In the case of referential cohesion, the tie exists between two or more references to the same concept. With substitution we do not have coreferentiality, but rather a substitute for a word or a group of words. There are three types of substitutions in English: verbal, nominal and clausal substitutions. In nominal substitutes, one, ones and same can stand in place of Nominal Groups and Head Nouns. In verbal substitutes, any nonfinite form of the verb do can stand in the place of the Lexical Verb in a Verbal Group. The third type, clausal substitution, is extremely common both in speech and in written prose. Here, the words so and not stand in place of an entire clause except for the subject, and the reader or listener can only interpret the meaning of the substitution in terms of what has previously been expressed in full. An interesting point about substitution is the grammatical distinction between the use of the substitute not following a verb like (think, suppose, guess) and the ordinary negative form of the verb, as in I don’t suppose. * Ellipsis is the omission of words, groups of clauses (referred to by Halliday as “substitution by zero”). Ellipsis takes place in similar grammatical environment to substitution. We have nominal, verbal and clausal ellipsis. The grammar of Nominal ellipsis permits the omission of Head Nouns in a Nominal Group. Verbal ellipsis is common in all short form answers and responses. Conjunctions Conjunction is the term used to describe the cohesive tie between clauses or sections of text in such a way as to demonstrate a meaningful relationship between them. This “linking” or “joining” is achieved by the use of Conjunctive Adjuncts, which are sometimes called “cohesive conjunctives”, for example: then, for this reason, on the other hand. These are words or expressions which have two textual functions: they 52 indicate conjunction and indicate the type of relationship that operates between the elements being joined, for example, relationship of time, reason, cause. Conjunctive adjuncts and conjunctions have different grammatical characteristics. There are four classes of cohesive conjunction: Additive Adversative Causal Temporal Other groupings may include: Additive – exemplification, e.g. for example. Adversative – contrastive, e.g. by contrast. Causal – result, e.g. as a consequence of this. Temporal – sequential, e.g. Firstly, secondly. Conjunctive adjuncts are signals or signposts that indicate the direction of argument. Lexical cohesion Lexical cohesion refers to the cohesive effect of the use of lexical items in discourse where the choice of an item relates to the choices that have gone before. Repetition or re-iteration is a type of lexical cohesion that probably has the strongest cohesive force. Synonyms and near synonyms can have the same effect as the entity referred to. Where the cohesive device has the same referent, it is termed an identity device. There are also superordinate synonym relations like flower and daisy or subordinate synonym relationship like daisy and flower. As well as synonyms, words from mutually exclusive categories (such as male and female, or hot and cold) are related as opposites. Words with contrastive meanings (antonyms) have cohesive effects. Collocation is also an indicator of cohesion. Words collocate differently in different registers. One of the most important types of lexical cohesion concerns the use of general nouns. With these words, a speaker of writer can create a cohesive link with almost any previously mentioned entity. 53 Within the class of general nouns there is the category of Anaphoric nouns (A-nouns) that is used to refer back to sections in the text. Summary nouns are used to summarize previous sections. Any noun which can be used to refer to other sections in the discourse (meta discursively) can be used as an anaphoric noun. Lexical cohesion involves meaningful connections in text that are created through the use of lexical items and that do not intrinsically involve reference, substitution, ellipsis or conjunction. Chapter 6: Process and Participants Meanings: the Clause as representation Language is a means of representing the world or worlds, perceived or imagined. Language encodes our experience, and plays a crucial role in our involvement with other people, life, the universe and everything. When we speak of language as representing real world events or imaginary events we are not ruling out the probability that language itself has a formative role in human experience and the reality it is representing. This representation is the ideational function of language, with the clause as its unit of representation. Processes The linguistic representation of the components of the clause: the participants and the processes take place with Nominal and Verbal Groups respectively. The participants are the entities involved in the process, they can be animate or inanimate. Material Processes: in an action oriented narrative, material processes involve doing words with actors and goals The actor is explicit performer of the material process and the goal is the recipient of the action In the active voice, the actor is the departing point of the clause: Jerry opened the door (actor – process – goal) In the passive voice the goal is the departing point of the clause: The door was opened by Jerry (Goal – process – actor) 54 Beneficiary: Sometimes a material process has three participants, e.g. He gave some of the bills to Jerry (Actor – process – goal – beneficiary) In the active voice the beneficiary is the Indirect Object Complement, in the passive clause it is often the subject Some material processes are metaphorical. In the example: “The burglar took a bath” If the taking involves a material process, i.e. was part of the theft where the burglar actually took the bath, then the bath is Goal. If, on the other hand, the burglar had a shower, and the statement is metaphorical, then bath is Range. Mental Processes: Some processes involve states of mind or psychological events. With such processes the Goal is substituted by phenomenon Senser and Phenomenon: in mental processes, the participant is labeled senser, and the experience felt, phenomenon. Relational Processes: are realized by the verb be or other copular verbs, e.g. seem, become, appear or sometimes by have own, possess. They typically fall into two categories: - Attributive Relational Processes: in attributive processes we have the carrier of the attributation and the attribute, e.g. She was hungry (carrier of the attributation – process – attribute) - Identifying Relational Processes: where the function of the relation is to identify the entity involved, e.g. Clint is his name. In such case the elements of the clause are: the identified – the identifying relational process and the identifier. Verbal Processes: are of two kinds: the quoted and the reported. The person who produces the utterance is the Sayer. The verbal process is realized by verbs like said. The actual words spoken are labeled quoted or reported depending on their function. Quoted is realized as direct speech, e.g. I said: if there isn’t I’ll go to city mall. Reported is realized as indirect speech, e.g. I said I wanted to go to city mall. The person to whom the verbalization is addressed is the Receiver. 55 (remember we use ask or say to - we never use ask to) Other processes: There are minor processes : Existential and Behavioural processes. Existential Processes have only one participant: the Existent. This type of process has two main grammatical realizations: With a copular, with there as the empty Subject, e.g. There were ten of us. With a copular, and the Existent as the Subject, and a Circumstantial adjunct, e.g. Ten of us were at the party Behavioural Processes: only one participant is usually required, the Behaver, e.g. the car vanished. Circumstance: are elements which carry a semantic load but which are neither process nor participants. They are concerned with matters like setting, physical or temporal, manner in which the process is implemented or other entities accompanying the process rather than directly engaged in it. Their realization is typically adverb or prepositional phrase. Part II: Halliday and functional linguistics THE FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH (Chapters 7-9) E300 Tutorial # 8 Notes prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib © The Functional Analysis of English CHAPTER 7 Chapters 7 - 9 Structures of the Nominal Group Tutorial outline: Definition of nominal group, nominal phrase, and nominal clause Functions: logical and experiential Logical function: sequencing head and modifier Experiential function: deictic, numerative, classifier, epithet, thing, qualifier Premodification and Postmodification 56 Definition The Nominal Group is a linguistic unit that has some of the characteristics of a noun. The nominal phrase or noun phrase has the noun or pronoun as the head. The Nominal Clause or noun clause is a clause that functions as a noun or a noun phrase. It may occur as a subject, object complement, in apposition or as a prepositional complement, e.g. nominal clause as a subject: What she said is awful. Nominal clause as an object: I don’t know what she said. The noun group is made up of the logical relation between the Head Noun and the Modifier. Modification may occur in a noun phrase, a verb phrase, an adjectival phrase, etc. Modifiers that precede the head noun are called premodifiers. Modifiers that follow the head noun are called postmodifiers. Halliday uses the term qualifier for cases of postmodification. The function of modifiers can be realized by various word classes: determiners, adjectives and numerals, as premodifiers, and prepositional phrases as postmodifiers. The function of the modifier can also be realized by a noun. Common examples of nouns as modifiers are found in everyday expressions like: art gallery, football field, grammar book, telephone number, etc. Logical and Experiential Functions The logical function of the Nominal Group is realized in the sequencing of the Head noun and Modifiers. As for the experiential functions, there are six experiential functions that are realized in the Nominal Group. These are the Deictic, The Numerative, The Epithet, the Classifier, the Thing and the Qualifier. Deictic Deictic is a term for a word or a phrase which directly relates a reference to a tie or place or person. The deictic function in the Nominal Group is realized by determiners: demonstratives like this, that, these and those, and also by the articles a, an, the. Deictics can 57 be possessive nouns or pronouns, e.g. my book, your home. They can also be non specific items like, some, each, both, neither, all, every. Numerative Numerative is a word of a phrase that refers to a number. Numeratives can be realized by numerals or expressions like many, several, few, lots of. Classifier and Epithet Classifiers: a word in the noun phrase that puts the modified item into a subclass, distinguishing it from other subtypes. The Epithet indicates features or characteristics, not a subtype of the category, example: two new light switches. Light is the classifier as it is the noun classifying the type of the switch. New, however, indicates the characteristic of the switch, not a subtype of it. You can distinguish an epithet from a classifier when you paraphrase the structure with Epithet in a be clause, e.g. The switches are new. The classifier cannot be rephrased in the same manner (the switches are light) X. Thing: The thing in the functional analysis of the Nominal group differs from its literal meaning. It can here refer to inanimate or animate categories as well as to abstract concepts. Thing refers to the main item in the nominal group (the head). In two new light switches, switches is the thing. Qualifier: A linguistic unit that is part of the nominal group, follows the Head and gives more information on it (qualifies it). A qualifier is usually a prepositional phrase but a nominal phrase, a verbal phrase, etc. The prepositional phrase can function As postmodifier/qualifier in a nominal group when functioning as an adjective: The women, in the corner, is from Italy As an adjunct in a clause when functioning as an adverb (of time, frequency, degree and manner). Adjuncts are part of the basic structure of a clause or a sentence and modify the verb. Examples of adjuncts: 58 He died in England (Adjunct/place) I have almost finished (Adjunct/degree) He came yesterday (adjunct/time) I love you regardless (adjunct/manner) When the prepositional phrase has the same reference as the head noun, it is said to be in apposition and has the function to qualify the Head. Apposition is the case where two words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence have the same reference. * Lebanon, in the Mediterranean basin, is a region of exceptional moderate climate in the Arab World. Lebanon and in the Mediterranean basin, are in apposition: they refer to the same entity. The prepositional phrase in this example functions as a qualifier/ postmodifier for the Nominal Group, the Head. In the following example the prepositional phrase serves a different function than to qualify the Head. * I was in Lebanon for two weeks, the prepositional phrase for two weeks is an adjunct. Recursion A prepositional phrase may have another prepositional phrase embedded in it and this pattern can be repeated (recurrent) within the embedded entity. The first [ of many steps [ on Determiner the road [ to ruin ] ] ] Preposition Numerative Determiner Preposition Noun Numerative Preposition 59 Noun Noun (See Fig. 7.6 P.145 ) 60 Paratactic and Hypotactic Nominal Group Complexes When two or more Nominal Groups are combined as a single constituent to form a super-Nominal Group and they have parallel or equal relation they are said to be paratactic Nominal Group Complex. Hypotactic combinations refer to clauses that have dependent relations on one another. CHAPTER 8 : Rank shifted clauses Tutorial outline: Definition of Rankshifted clauses Rankshifted clauses and the relative clause Categories: Superordinate and Embedded Functions: logical function (in sequencing it functions as a modifier) experiential function (modifying in premodification sequences and qualifying in postmodification sequences, through defining, restricting, non-restricting functions) Types: Full defining, reduced, omitted A rank shifted clause is one which is used as a unit of lower rank or part of such a unit; it is also referred to as an embedded clause, e.g. its rank shifts from clause to group. The clause which is inside another clause is the embedded (or rank shifted) clause. The clause which contains the embedded clause is the superordinate clause. From the logical point of view the rankshifted clause functions as a modifier. From the experiential point of view the rankshifted clause functions as modifier in premodification and qualifier in postmodification. The convention for symbolizing a rank shifted clause is the use of double square brackets [[ ]] enclosing a clause. Rankshifted clauses are known as defining relative clauses or restrictive relative clauses in. Full defining relative clauses contain a relative pronoun. This may be a wh-pronoun (who, whom, which, whose, where, when or that). In some relative clauses the relative pronoun can be 61 omitted and the clause is termed a reduced relative clause. In writing, the defining relative clause is NOT separated from the Head it restricts by a comma, e.g. The woman whom he married was his childhood sweetheart. In a non-defining relative clause, also called a non-restrictive relative clause, additional information is given on the Head noun without restricting or defining it. In such instances commas ARE used to separate the non-defining relative clause: My students, who are bright, will all pass the final. Any common noun and some pronouns can be modified by a defining relative clause. The Nominal Group which contains the relative clause may realize any function open to Nominal Groups. In the following examples the relative clause is between brackets and the grammar function of the relative clause is given between parenthesis: 1Any person [[ who writes good English]] is a learnt person (subject) 2Soil variation affect the plants [[ which are grown]] (Direct Object Complement) 3The electricity should be tested with some device [[ which indicates voltage ]] (complement of preposition in adjunct) 4It’s a job [[ that can be done all in one go ]] (Intensive complement) The relative pronoun itself can function as modifier (whose) or adjunct (where, when). Omitted relative pronoun (zero pronoun option). Some relative pronouns cannot be omitted: 1The men [[who know English]] had good fortunes 2He met the woman [who took his heart forever] In these two examples the relative pronoun cannot be omitted However, in the example below, the use of the relative pronoun is optional: 1The book [that she wrote] was good / The book [she wrote] was good 62 This is called the zero pronoun option. The meaning remains the same whether the relative pronoun is used or omitted. Although grammar offers these possibilities, stylistics and registers determine which option is chosen. Churchill was reprimanded for ending his statements with prepositions. Non-finite relative clauses Non finites can be used in relative clause. Non finites are the infinitives (used with to) and the participles (present with –ing functioning as an adjective and past with -ed), examples: 1- Hot water taps draw from a pipe [connected to the hot water cylinder] 2- Most arguments [presented in favour of the quiz next week] had little support. Bracketed structures are non-finite clauses. Clauses and Embedding Clauses may have multiple embedding. Embedding occurs with binding conjunctions or binders like when, because, unless, that binding a dependent clause to an independent one. Rank shifted clauses as subject or complement It is possible for a rankshifted clause to stand in for the whole of a Nominal Group as subject of a clause. [ What is Beautiful ] is also S F C F in some ways ugly . A A C S The embedded (rankshifted) superordinate clause. clause 63 is the subject of the As well as functioning as subject, rankshifted clauses can also function as complement: They took [ what they wanted] S F/P C S F/P C Non-finite clauses as subject or complement Non finite clauses can realize the subject or complement Function. [Cutting plaster] is not difficult P C S F C 64 [ To err ] is human ; [ to forgive ] divine P P S F C S C Extraposition Extraposition is the process of moving a word, a phrase, or a clause to a position in a sentence which is different from the position it usually has. Extraposition can function as a rankshifting strategy. Consider the following examples: Aristotle’s arguments appealed to logic. This is not surprising. 12- That Aristotle’s arguments appealed to logic is not surprising It isn’t surprising that Aristotle’s arguments appealed to logic In the first example rankshifting occurs through the use of the binder that at the beginning of the sentence. In the second example, the empty pronoun it stands in and holds the fort until the real information about the subject comes along in the shape of the rankshifted clause. It is called the anticipatory subject and the rankshifted clause here is the postponed subject. Non-finite rankshifted clauses can be extraposed: 1- It is difficult to disentangle them. 2- It is impossible to say how far Other Rankshifted clauses Some adjectives permit clause embedding ready (to die for) quick (to reply) eager (to help) happy (to be of service) Rankshifted clauses can be embedded in comparative adverbial groups. Move easily [than anyone had imagined] 65 Faster [than any one of his rivals] As fast [as you can] Too hot [to handle] Too young [to be in love] So soon [that no one is ready]. 66 CHAPTER 9: Clause Complexes : Expansion Tutorial outline: Definition Types: equal (coordination) and dependent (subordination) Linking conjunctions: linkers and binders Linking relations: parataxis and hypotaxis Thematic roles: marked and unmarked Clause complexes are clauses which contain one or more dependent clauses in addition to the independent or main clause. In addition to rankshifting (cases of embedding), there are two further ways in which sentences can incorporate more than one clause. The first involves linking the clauses together on an equal footing. The second involves binding one clause to another in a dependency relationship. Where clauses are joined together in either of these ways, we have a clause complex. Equal clauses (cases of the compound clause) In the case of clauses with equal status the linking is done through the use of a category of conjunctions called linking conjunctions or linkers. In traditional grammars these are known as coordinating conjunctions (and the resulting structure is the compound clause). The semantic distinction among these linkers is as follows: and is additive, indicating addition and sometimes chronological or logical sequence; but is adversative indicating a contrast; or is disjunctive, signaling alternation; so is consequential, indicating cause and effect relation. The phenomenon of linking that involves such conjunctions and operates among equal clauses, is called parataxis. The clauses linked in this way are said to have a paratactic relation to each other. Dependent clauses (cases of subordinate clause) Dependent clauses combine in clause complexes where a dependent clause is bound to a dominant clause through hypotaxis. Hypotaxis means that one clause is attached to another but has a lower status. 67 The Blue Nile grows wider as it advances into the desert. The second clause as it advances into the desert is bound in a hypotactic relation to the first clause The Blue Nile grows wider. The conjunction as shows this relationship. Binding conjunctions or Binders (known in traditional grammar as subordinating conjunctions) include: when, while, until, before, after, if, unless, since, because, where, whereas, so that, as). They are used to indicate hypotactic (dependent) relationship. Sequencing of clauses: Theme and Rheme Sequencing of clauses suggests a thematic role for the clause in the theme position, as a whole in relation to the other clauses within the complex. The linking conjunctions (and, but, or, so) never occurs at the beginning of the complex which it links. The binding conjunctions (as, because, when---) can occur at the beginning of the complex which it binds. The thematically unmarked sequence is: dominant clause followed by dependent clause. The thematically marked sequence is dependent clause followed by dominant clause. The fact of making the dependent clause the starting point has meaning for the message conveyed. Non-finite dependent clauses Dependent clauses have the function of expanding the proposition in the dominant clause, indicating some contingency relating to that proposition; of condition, time, purpose, means, matter… Non-finite clauses in a clause complex with a finite clause are always dependent. 1. Prepare for a quiz as advised in Moodle 2. Looking back on what has been achieved one sees the good spells and the bad. 68 In the first example the dominant clause precedes the non-finite dependent clause. There are binders to signal the dependency relationship. In the second example the dependent clause comes first with no binder or linker. This type of dependent clauses is labeled expansion clauses. Defining and non-defining relative clauses The defining relative clause is an essential component of the Nominal Group. It restricts the scope of the head noun. The non-defining relative clause, also known as the non-restrictive relative clause is less intimately bound up with the item that it relates to and is analyzed not as a rankshifted (embedded) clause but as a dependent (subordinate) clause. 1He measured the shadow of the pyramid which was visible under the noon sun. 2- He measured the shadow of the pyramid and it was visible under the noon sun. The function of the relative clause in this example is not to restrict the head noun, but rather to provide additional information. Such a clause is grammatically dependent on the dominant clause, but not an integral part of it. Non-defining relative clauses are analyzed not as paratactic but as hypotactic structures. They are not integrated into the dominant clause in the way that rankshifted clauses are but they are dependent. There are additional grammar differences between defining and nondefining clauses. In defining relative clauses there is the option of using either wh-pronoun or that. In non-defining clauses the relative pronoun is wh-pronoun. Part II: Halliday and functional linguistics THE FUNCTIONAL ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH (Chapters 10-12) E300 meeting#9 Tutorial Notes prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib © 69 The Functional Analysis of English Chapter 10: Complex clauses / Projection Projection is another function in clause complexes that contain verbal processes. Projecting verbs: Mental processes involving verbs like believe, hope, pretend, wish and wonder, can project Verbal processes involving verbs like argue, claim, declare, explain, insist, promise and vow, project. The ideational function of projection clauses identifies categories of sayer, quoted and reported. The logical organization focuses on the paratactic and hypotactic combinations of projecting and projected clauses. Hypotactic projection clauses: The clause containing the sayer and the reporting verb is the dominant clause and the reported element is the dependent clause. In reported speech (indirect speech) the projected element, is grammatically integrated with the reporting clause. The result is that the choice of tense, pronoun and other deictic elements (adverbs of time and place) in the reported clause are influenced by the general orientation of the reporting clause. This does not happen with direct speech where no grammar changes occur, e.g. He said “you are a thief”(direct speech). 70 Paratactic projection clauses are typically direct speech. Hypotactic projection clauses are typically reported speech. Projecting and projected clauses may occur in any order. Projecting clauses may interrupt projected clauses, e.g. “Civil war” he said “is a disgrace”. Reported speech makes use of the binding conjunction, that in clause complexes with projection. The use of that signals a hypotactic projection. Although binders cannot normally be omitted from finite dependent clause, the use of that as a binder is often optional. We can have: 1- He said that he had not known about my feelings. or 2- He said he had not known about my feelings. Non finite and finite projections: Like expansion clauses, projection clauses may be finite or non-finite. Reported promises, commands or requests involve non-finite dependent clauses, e.g. 1- I told him to follow my lead. 2- He promised to honour his vows. The verb “ask” can be used to project questions and requests, e.g. She asked me to help her Dependent and independent projections: 71 The clauses projected by verbs are dependent clauses. Clauses occurring with the nouns take the form of rankshifted clauses occurring as Postmodifiers of the Head noun. 1- He concluded (that) there was no harm done (Projection /dependent clause) 2- He drew the conclusion that there was no harm done (Projection / postmodifier) Ambiguous structures: A potential for ambiguity arises when it is not clear whether a structure is an expansion or a projection. Sometimes the boundaries are not clear cut. Chapter 11 Applications of Functional Analysis The functional analysis of English helps the language user understand the functions of language and ways of using it for effect. The language user needs to understand the functions of language and how to resist linguistic pressures and to recognize when people are using language to exploit or oppress others. There are methods of analysis that focus on the structure. These split the clause into its SFPCA components, each having its distinctive characteristics. Other methods focus on the clause as message. These look at information structure: Theme and Rheune or Given and New. 72 In both cases language is recognized and treated as a system or a set of systems. Viewing the characteristics of registers, structurally and functionally, helps native and non-native users produce appropriate valued texts. Grammar features of scientific writing are characterized by nominalization of processes, e.g. accelerate becomes acceleration, compare-comparison and so on. The tendency to use Nominal Groups rather than verbal processes has a number of major effects in scientific texts. It projects external objective reality that facilitates the expression of general “truths” or “claims”. Register analysis, the study of thematic progression in texts, lexical cohesion, cohesive conjunctions, the use of different verbal processes, reporting verbs, etc, all contribute to the learner’s awareness of the appropriate and effective use of English. Methods of linguistic analysis give us the tool for investigating the characteristics of a text. Non-native speakers’ discourse is frequently a string of unconnected independent clauses, whereas the native speaker signals the clause relations and “peaks of prominence” in the message. Functional grammar helps highlight the significant grammatical features in valued texts that can be learned to improve communication skills. In language teaching, it establishes beyond doubt that simplistic linguistic analysis based only on identifying incorrect grammar use is of little help in the evaluation of the success of communication. 73 The Functional perspective introduced the concepts of register and language for specific purposes. Appropriate cohesive devices and specific aspects of grammar like ellipsis and substitution are new areas that merit functional analysis. These were not targeted in any old pedagogic grammar. Also, changing the focus of a sentence and manipulating word order indicate more than just movements at the surface level of grammar. Appropriateness in languages use varies as the functions of language vary and in relation to the situation of the language exchange. Language and power Language is a human and social phenomenon, it develops and changes, as people use it for social purposes. Our construction of reality and the world is dependent on language. Words and grammar picture reality in certain ways that also reflect the language user’s ideologies and attitudes towards the topic represented. Grammar has the category of possessive pronouns, for example, that indicate ownership. These may be used also to refer to non-material possessions like my wife, my country, thus creating specific affiliations or relations. The exertion of power by individuals with certain social roles in particular social positions is often revealed in the form of language, as well as the lack of power. An example is the language used by teachers 74 who have the responsibility for both discipline and learning. This is displayed in the language they use. Language analysis can contribute to our understanding of power relations and ideological process as reflected in the discourse. Description is one stage in critical discourse analysis. The other levels relate to interpretation and explanation. The focus is on choices made with vocabulary, grammar and textual features. The choice of words, grammatical form and text structure in terms of the experiential value (how is the language user representing the world), relational values (how are the social relationships between interactants expressed) and the expressive values (how are the attitudes to the topic and the social identities of the language users revealed). Norman Fairclough poses the following list for critical discourse analysts: 1- 2- What experiential values do grammatical features have? - What type of processes and participants dominate? - Is agency clear? - Are processes what they seem? - Are nominalizations used? - Are sentences active or passive? - Are sentences positive or negative? What relational values do grammatical features have? - What modes (declarative, interrogative, imperative) are used? - Are there important features of relational modality? 75 - Are the pronouns we and you used, and if so, for what purposes? 3- What expressive value do grammatical features have? - 4- Are there important features of expressive modality? How are simple sentences linked together? - What logical connectors are used? - Are complex sentences characterized by coordination or subordination? - What means are used for referring inside and outside the text? In an analysis that incorporate the above items more is revealed through critical discourse that would indicate through features of the text relations of the world. Chapter 12 Although Historical perspective modern linguistics differs significantly from traditional approaches, some of the concepts and insights from earlier periods underpin much modern thought. The notions of active and passive voice, word class, tense, subject and object, person, number, subject and verb agreement are indispensable for grammar discussion. The principles of a science of linguistics developed from earlier historical comparative work. 76 Ferdinand de Saussure redirected the course of linguistic study away from historical concerns to the synchronic (chain) and diachronic (choice) analysis. Saussure distinguished between the language system “La langue” and the individual’s use of the system “La Parole”. American Linguists: Edward Sapir Examined the languages of Native Americans and proposed that language structures, including grammar, reflect social and cultural influences. Leonard Bloomfield was inspired by the behaviorist psychology arguing that language is a set of acquired habits that can be documented through empirical observation. Noam Chomsky focused on the field of syntax on primarily two areas: - Deep and surface structures in grammar - The mechanism of transformation Chomsky had no interest in the social aspect of language. He was preoccupied with discovering the universals of language. He viewed language as a biologically determined phenomenon, innate to human beings. Michael Halliday views language primarily as a social phenomenon. He is interested in language and communication. Dell Hymes posits the construct of communicative competence, of which grammatical competence is only a component, “there are rules of use without which the rules of grammar would be useless”. 77 William Labov researched the role of situational factors in systematic dialectical variation and historical change. Benjamin Lee Whorf places great emphasis on the role of language in culture and argued that a society’s perception of reality is determined by the language of that society, e.g. Eskimo and snow 30 synonyms in the Inuit Language. The Prague School A group of linguists with a line of thinking attributed to Saussurean principles, laid down some functional explanations on language like Theme and Rheme. Firth and Malinowski Bronislaw Malinowski studied “primitive” languages and argued that language was primarily a form of action. He coined the term “context of situation” and explained that in order to understand an utterance, we need to know not only the literal meaning of words but also all the complex of social detail in which the utterance occurred. J.R.Firth argued that the grammar of a language is polysystemic, a system of systems. Corpus Linguistics 78 Advances in computer technology have facilitated great progress in corpus linguistics, which involves the computational analysis of vast collections of textual data. Book Three: Part III: Discourse analysis LANGUAGE AND POWER (Chapters 1-2) E300 Language and Power Tutorial Notes Prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib © Meeting # 10 Ch. 1: Critical Language Study Language and Power is a trend developed by Norman Fairclough that examines how language functions in maintaining and changing power relations in contemporary society. Critical language study focuses on language and power relations in an attempt to reveal processes leading to consent and examining ways of resisting and changing them. Language and power is about connections between language use and unequal relations of power. The focus is two-fold. The first is theoretical: to help correct widespread underestimation on the significance of language in the production, maintenance and change of social relations of power. The second is more practical: to help increase consciousness of how language contributes to the domination of some people by others, because consciousness in the first step to emancipation. Linguists, and specially those working in the field of sociolinguistics, have studied languages and dialects, without deep explorations of the relationships of language and power. Critical language analysis studies existing conventions as the outcome of power relations and power struggle. Ideologies are closely linked to language. They are embedded in particular conventions with language as the primary medium of social control and power. Language contributes to the domination of some people by others. 79 Resistance and change depend on people consciousness of domination and its modalities. developing a critical The critical study of language raises consciousness of exploitative social relations and the role of power and ideology. Critical language study analyses social interactions in a way that focuses upon their linguistic elements uncovering the role of social relationships and their effect. Approaches to language study Earlier approaches to language study include: Linguistics Sociolinguistics Pragmatics Cognitive psychology and artificial intelligence Conversation and discourse analysis. Linguistics The term linguistics refers to all the branches of language study which are inside the academic discipline of linguistics. It is sometimes termed “linguistics proper” when it is the study of the sound system of a language (phonology), the grammatical structure of words (morphology), sentence and word order (syntax) and more formal aspects of meaning (semantics). Linguistics is accused of holding a narrow conception of language study and of giving little attention to actual speech or writing. It perceives language as a potential, a system, an abstract competence, rather than describing actual language practice. Linguistics assumes an idealized view of language which isolates it from the social and historical matrix outside of which it cannot actually exist. Sociolinguistics Sociolinguistics developed under the influence of anthropology and sociology and looked at socially conditioned variation in language. 80 Sociolinguistics, however, focuses on the relations without attending to the social conditions that made them and the conditions surrounding their change. Pragmatics Anglo-American pragmatics is closely associated with analytical philosophy, particularly with the works of Austin and Searle on “speech acts”. The key insight is that language is seen as a form of action: that spoken or written utterances constitute the performance of speech acts such as promising or asking or asserting or warning, or on a different plane, referring to people or things and implicating meanings which are not overtly expressed. The idea of uttering as acting is an important one that is also central to CLS. The main weakness of pragmatics from a critical point of view is its “Individualism”: action is thought of as emanating wholly from the individual and is often conceptualized in terms of the strategies adopted by the individual speaker to achieve his or her goals. Cognitive psychology and Artificial Intelligence Discrepancies exist between what is said and what is meant, and with how people work out what is meant from what is said. Processes of comprehension and processes of production are investigated by cognitive psychologists and workers in artificial intelligence concerned with computer simulation of production and comprehension matching features of utterance at various levels with representations stored in long-term memory. These representations are prototypes for a very diverse collection of things referred to as Members’ Resources or MR. MRs are socially determined and ideologically shaped. The processes of production and comprehension are essential to an understanding of the interrelations of language, power and ideology. Conversation Analysis and Discourse Analysis Conversation analysis is one prominent approach within discourse analysis that has been developed by a group of sociologists known as “ethnomethodologists”. Ethnomethodologists study how people organize and understand their everyday activity. Conversation analysis studies natural conversation in terms of linguistic characteristics and use. CA has demonstrated that conversation is 81 systematically structured, and that there is evidence of the orientation of participants to these structures in the ways in which they design their own conversational turns and react to those of others. Conversation analysis, however, has been resistant to making connections between “micro” structures of the conversation and the “macro” structures of social institutions and societies. Ch. 2: Discourse as Social Practice Language is centrally involved in power and struggle for power through its ideological properties. Language and discourse: Language is conceived of in terms of discourse: language structures influenced by social practice that is determined by social structures. Discourse and orders of discourse: discourse is determined by socially constituted orders of discourse; sets of conventions associated with social institutions. Class and power: orders of discourse are ideologically shaped by power relations in social institutions. Dialectic of structures and practices: discourse has effects upon social structures as well as being determined by them. There is a need to conceive of actual discourse as a manifestation of unequal relationships between participants who are firmly in control, who do not need to mitigate their discourse and whose language exchange is reduced to minimal phrases. Control is exercised with no acknowledgement of the other’s contribution, interruptions and allowing no interruptions to own turn. Control is exercised with minimal answers and closing off interruption. Discourse properties are determined by social conditions and the nature of the relationship. Social conditions determine properties of discourse, the process of producing and interpreting texts and how these cognitive processes are socially shaped and relative to social conventions. The focus is two-fold: the social determination of language use and the linguistic determination of society. Language and discourse 82 Language is conceived of as a form of social practice. Langue and Parole Saussure regarded “Langue” as a system or code that is prior to actual language use. “Parole” is determined by individual choices. Language use “parole” is characterized by extensive linguistic variation. Sociolinguistics has shown that this variation is not, as Saussure thought, a product of individual choice, but a product of social differentiation: Language varies according to the social identities of people in interaction, their socially defined purposes, social setting, and so on. So, Saussure’s individualistic notion of “Parole” is unsatisfactory and instead the term discourse is used to commit to the view that language use is socially (not individually) determined. Saussure understood that “Langue” is something unitary and homogeneous throughout a society. A variety of language is standardized as a result of economic, political and cultural influences in a particular historical epoch. What we really have is politically motivated linguistic theory. Saussure’s langue/parole distinction is a general one underlying social conventions and actual use. Langue and its conventions of use are the site of power struggle and diversity, rather than being unitary and homogeneous. Discourse as social practice Language is part of society, not external to it. It is a socially conditioned process. Linguistic phenomena are social in the sense that whenever people speak, listen, write or read, they do so in ways which are determined socially, and which have social effects. Social phenomena are linguistics, in the sense that the language activity which goes on in social contexts is not merely a reflection or expression or expression of social processes and practices, but is part of those processes and practices. The term Discourse is used to refer to the whole process of social interaction, of which the text is just a part. The process of production, for which the text is a product and the process of interpretation for which the text is a resource are also included in the analysis. 83 Discourse involves social conditions which can be specified as social conditions of production and social conditions of interpretation. These social conditions relate to three different levels of social organization: The level of the social situation or the immediate social environment in which the discourse occurs. The level of the social institution which constitutes a wider matrix for the discourse. The level of society as a whole. These social conditions shape the Members’ Resources (MR) that people bring to course production and interpretation, which in turn shape the way in which texts are produced and interpreted. Social conditions of production Process of Production Text Process of Interpretation Interaction Social conditions of Interpretation Context Discourse as text, interaction and context In seeing language as discourse and as social practice, one is committing oneself not just to analyzing texts, not just to analyzing processes of 84 production and interpretation, but to analyzing the relationship between texts, processes and their social conditions: the immediate conditions of the situational context and the more remote conditions of institutional and social structures. The relationship between texts, interactions and contexts corresponds to three dimensions of critical discourse analysis: - - - Description: is the stage which is concerned with the formal properties of the text, identifying and labeling formal features of a text and transcribing speech. Interpretation: is concerned with the relationship between text and interaction. The text is seen as the product of a process of production and a resource in the process of interpretation. The fours of interpretation of the text influences the way of transcribing it. Explanation: is concerned with the relationship between interaction and social context with the social determination of the processes of production and interpretation: interactions, social orders of discourse, social structures which shape them and their social effects. Verbal and visual language: Texts are essentially verbal but talk is interwoven with gestures, facial expressions, movement, posture, to such an extent that it cannot be properly understood without reference to these “visuals”. Discourse and orders of discourse: Social conditions of discourse and the determination of discourse by social structures and the way in which actual discourse is determined by underlying conventions of discourse, termed Orders of discourse by Michel Foucault, embody particular ideologies. Social preconditions for action prescribe that the individual is able to act only in so far as there are social conventions to act within. Discourse and practice are constrained by interdependent networks (orders): orders of discourse and social orders. The term social order refers to the particular social space (domain) associated with various types of practice. 85 Social order Order of discourse Types of practice Types of discourse Actual Practice Actual discourse Social orders and orders of discourse The order of discourse of a social institution structures constituent discourses in a particular way. The order of discourse of the society structures the orders of discourse of the various social institutions in a particular way. How discourses are structured in a given order of discourse, and how structurings change over time, are determined by changing relationships of power at the level of the social institution or of the society. Discourse draws upon predictable discourse types associated with social institutions. Class and power The social conditions of discourse at the societal and institutional levels suggest how social structures at these levels determine discourse. The way in which orders of discourse are structured and the ideologies which they embody are determined by the relationship of power in particular social institutions and the society as a whole. There is a need to be sensitive in critical discourse analysis to properties of society and institutions associated with the text under examination. Ideology Institutional practices that people draw upon often embody assumptions (or ideologies) that directly or indirectly legitimize existing power relations. Practices become naturalized and types of discourse function to sustain unequal power relations. Power relations, class relations and social struggle Power relations are always relations of struggle. Social struggle occurs between groupings. It may be more or less intense and may appear in 86 more or less overt forms, but all social developments and any exercise of power take place under conditions of social struggle in a society where power relations are characterized by monopoly. In modern societies, there is a special relation between ideology and exercise of power by consent as opposed to coercion, but social control is increasingly practiced. Discourse is the favorite vehicle of ideology and therefore control by consent. Dialectic of structures and practices The relationship between discourse and social structures is dialectical in the way that discourse assures such importance in terms of power relationship and power struggle. Social practice does not merely reflect a reality. Social practice is in an active relationship to reality and changes in reality. Social structures determine discourse and are also a product of discourse. Social roles become subject positions, part of social structures. Discourse types determine discourse practice which reproduces discourse types. Social subjects are constrained to operate within the subject positions set up in discourse types. Being constrained is a precondition for being enabled. Discourse types are a resource for subjects, but the activity of combining them is a creative one. Orders of discourse embody ideological assumptions and these sustain and legitimize existing elations of power. Social institutions has the hidden agenda of reproducing class relations and other higher level social structures, in addition to the overt agenda, e.g. educational, work flow, institutional, etc. In discourse people can be legitimizing or delegitimizing particular power relations without necessarily being conscious of doing so. Part III: Discourse analysis LANGUAGE AND POWER (Chapters 3-4) E300 Meeting # 11 Tutorial Notes Prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib Language and Power Chapter 3: Discourse and Power. 87 In exploring the various dimensions of the relations of language and power we focus on two major aspects: 1- power in discourse, and 2- power behind discourse Power in discourse is concerned with discourse as a phase where relations of power are exercised and enacted. Examples are Face-to-Face spoken discourse, cross-cultural discourse and the discourse of the mass media exercising hidden power. Power behind discourse, reflecting dimensions of the social orders of social institutions or societies, are themselves shaped and constrained by relations of power. Examples are the effects of power in the differentiation of dialects into standard and non-standard, the conventions associated with particular discourse types, e.g. classroom discourse. The final argument underlines the view that power, wherever it be “in” or “behind” discourse is never definitively held by any person or social grouping, because power can be won or exercised through the dynamics of social interaction in which it may also be lost. Fairclough takes a Marxist view in interpreting it all from the perspective of social struggle of classes. 1-Power in Discourse Face-to-face discourse where participants are unequal reflect an unequal encounter. Manifestations of this aspect are found in the number of interruptions by the powerful participant directed to constrain and to control the contribution of the non-powerful. Three types of constraints are exercised and enacted: aconstraints on content : enacted in the discourse b- constraints on relations: enacted in the discourse cconstraints on the subject position: that people can occupy in the discourse. All of these constraints are very closely connected, they overlap and cooccur in practice. All the directive speech acts (orders and questions) come from the powerful participant. The non-powerful has the obligation to comply and answer, in accordance with the subordinate relation of his role. 88 The constraints derive from the conventions of the discourse type. It is the prerogative of the powerful participant to determine which discourse type(s) may be legitimately drawn upon. Thus, in addition to directly constraining contributions, powerful participants can further constrain discourse by opting for a particular discourse type. Once a discourse type has been selected, its conventions would constrain and regulate the flow of the interaction/discourse exchanged. However, the more powerful participants may allow or disallow varying degrees of latitude to less powerful participants. Cross-cultural encounters: are unequal encounters where possibilities for culturally-based miscommunication are ample. In gate-keeping encounters, e.g. job interview, gate-keepers come from the dominant culture they constrain the discourse types which can be drawn upon to those of the dominant grouping, including all expected conventions of the exchange, linguistically (appropriate turn-taking strategies, phatic communion, sequencing of information, direct/indirect responses etc.) and extralinguistically (gaze, proxemics, head movement body position, etc. ) Media discourse is characterized by the use of hidden power for participants who are separated in time and place. The discourse used in television, ratio, film and newspaper involve hidden relations of power. Media discourse is one-sided as opposed to face-to-face interaction, where discourse is exchanged between two participants. In Media discourse, producers exercise power over consumers by determining what is included and excluded and how events are represented. An interesting manifestation of power in mass media is the perspective whose perspective is adopted. In British media, the balance of sources and perspectives and ideology is overwhelmingly in favour of existing power-holders. Media operate as a means for the expression and reproduction of the power of the dominant class and bloc. The mediated power of existing power-holders is also a hidden power, because it is implicit in the practices of the media rather than being explicit. Linguistic strategies reflecting power include Nominalization and causality. A process is expressed as a noun, with the effect of hiding crucial aspects of the process through the grammar form selected. 89 Media discourse is able to exercise manipulative and powerful influence on social reproduction, but people do negotiate their relationship to the ideal subjects proposed by media discourse. However the exercise of media power by power holders is perceived as professional practices. Hidden power can sometimes be a characteristic of face-to-face discourse. A close connection between requests and power is identified, as the right to request someone to do something often derives from having power. There are however, many grammatically different forms for making requests. Some are direct and mark the power relationship explicitly, while others are indirect and leave it more implicit. Direct requests are typically expressed grammatically in imperative sentences. Indirect requests can be expressed grammatically in questions of various degrees of elaborateness and corresponding indirectness, including hints. The “power behind discourse” is also a hidden power, in that the shaping of orders of discourse by relations of power is not generally apparent to people. 2- Power behind discourse The social order of discourse (the connections of the exchange) is put together and held together as a hidden effect of power. Example, standardization, whereby a particular social dialect, is elevated into what is called a standard, or even a national, language. Standard Language Standardization is a part of a much wider process of economic, political and cultural unification. We can think of its growth as a long process of colonization, whereby it gradually “took over” the major social institutions of literature, government and administration, law, religion and education. Standard English emerges as the language of political and cultural power, and as the language of the politically and culturally powerful. Standard English was regarded as correct English, and other social dialects were stigmatized not only in terms of 90 correctness but also in terms which indirectly reflected on the lifestyles, morality and so forth of their speakers. Standard English moved to prescription through codification and was portrayed as the national language, although it remains a social dialect. The power behind discourse: a discourse type portray through the discourse conventions particular power relations associated with the discourse of the participants. Power and access to discourse. The constitution of orders of discourse and their component discourse types brings an interest in the study of who has access to them and who has the power to impose and enforce constraints on access. There is a plethora of constraints on access to various types of speech and writing. Religious rituals, medical examination, lessons, litigation are examples of discourse types that are constrained. Access to a high level of literacy is a precondition for a variety of socially rewarded goods including well-paid jobs. However, literacy is not equally distributed. There is constraint on access and the exclusion of people from particular types of discourse, who remain unfamiliar with the conventions. Constraints on access: formality Formality is best regarded as a property of social situations which has effects upon the language forms used. It manifests three types of constraints associated with the exercise of power: aConstraints on contents: the discourse in formal situations is subject to constraints on topic, relevance and fixed interactive routines. bConstraints on subjects: the social identities of those qualified to occupy subject positions in the discourses of formal situations are defined. cConstraints on relations: formal situations are characterized by an exceptional orientation to and making of position, status, and “face”. Power and social distance are overt and consequently there is a strong tendency towards politeness. Politeness is based upon recognition of differences of power and degrees of social distance. Moreover, consistency of language forms is also 91 a characteristic of formal situations that influence the vocabulary that has to be selected from a restricted set throughout. Recently, there has been a shift from the explicit making of power relationship in a discourse towards a system based upon solidarity rather than power (tu/vous) hiding power is a strategy that is sometimes used for manipulative reasons. Conclusion Discourse is part of social practice and contributes to the reproduction of social structures. If., therefore, there are systematic constraints on the contents of discourse and on the social relationships enacted in it and the social identities enacting them, these can be expected to have long term effects on the knowledge and beliefs social relationships and social identities of the institutions and societies. Constraints Contents Relations Subjects Structural effects Knowledge and Beliefs Social Relationships Social Identities 92 Ch 4: Discourse, common sense and ideology This section discusses the relationship of ideology to discourse. Conventions that are drawn upon in discourse embody ideological assumptions that were naturalized to become common sense. These have the function of sustaining existing power relations. Harold Garfinkel (a sociologist) has argued that the world is built upon assumptions and expectations which control both the actions of members of a society and their interpretation of the actions of others. Such assumptions and expectations are implicit, back grounded and taken for granted. The effectiveness of ideology depends on a considerable degree on it being merged with this common-sense background to discourse and other forms of social interaction. Coherence of the discourse is dependent on discoursal common sense: between the sequential parts of a text and between the parts of the text and the world. Common sense assumptions and expectations of the interpreter are drawn from the members’ resources (MR). Texts presuppose a view of the world that is common sense for some people, but strikes others as odd. The producer of a text constructs the text as an interpretation of the world. Formal features of the text are traces of that interpretation. The traces constitute cues for the text interpreter, who draws upon his assumptions and expectations (MR/conventions). Thus text interpretation is the interpretation is the interpretation of interpretation. Aspects of coherence: implicit assumptions chain together successive parts of text through supplying explicit propositions and inferencing. The operation of ideology is seen in terms of ways of constructing texts which constantly and cumulatively “impose assumptions: upon text interpreters and text producers, typically without either being aware of it. 93 Common sense and ideology: “Common sense” is substantially, though not entirely, ideological common sense in the service of sustaining unequal relations of power. Many assumptions are taken for granted. If one becomes aware that a particular aspect of common sense is sustaining power inequalities at one’s own expense, it ceases to be common sense, and may cease to have the capacity to sustain power inequalities, i.e. to function ideologically. Ideologies are brought to discourse not as explicit elements of the text, but as the background assumptions which lead the text producer to “textualize” the world in a particular way. Texts do not typically spout ideology. They so position the interpreter through their cues that he brings ideologies to the interpretation of the texts and reproduces them in the process. Assumptions which text producers put across as commonsensical. Diverse ideologies come from differences in position, experience and interests between social groupings, which enter into relationship with each other in terms of power. These groupings may be social classes, women versus men, groupings based on ethnicity. Groupings of a more “local” sort are associated with a particular institution. For instance, in education, children, parents, and teachers, and groupings within each of these (based upon age, class, political allegiance, etc.) may in principle develop different educational ideologies. Ideological struggle takes place in language. Language itself is a stake in social struggle as well as a site of social struggle. Having the power to determine things like which word meanings or which linguistic and communicative norms are “legitimate” or “correct” or “appropriate” is an important aspect of social and ideological power, and therefore a focus of ideological struggle. Seeing existing language practices and orders of discourse as reflecting the victories and defeats of past struggle, and as stakes which are struggled over, is, along with the complementary concept of “power behind discourse”, a major characteristic of critical language study (CLS). In politics, each opposing party or political force tries to win acceptance for its own discourse type as the preferred and “natural” one for talking and writing about the state, government, forms of political action and all 94 aspects of polities, as well as for demarcating politics itself from other domains. The primary domains in which social struggle takes place are the social institutions and the situation types which each institution recognizes. A dominated type may be in a relationship of opposition to a dominant one. Michael Halliday calls one type of oppositional discourse the antilanguage. Anti-languages are set up and used as conscious alternatives to the dominant or established discourse types. Examples would be the language of the criminal underworld or the non-standard social dialect of a minority. Another possibility is for the dominated discourse type to be contained by a dominant one. Naturalization and the generation of common sense: ideologies come to be ideological common sense to the extent that the discourse types which embody them become naturalized. This depends on the power of the social groupings whose ideologies and whose discourse types are at issue. The learning of a dominant discourse type comes to be seen as a question of acquiring the necessary skills or techniques to operate in the institution: the appearance in the discourse and the essence. Ideology and meaning: we treat the meaning of a word and other linguistic expressions) as a simple matter of fact. Because of the considerable status accorded by common sense to the dictionary, there is a tendency to generally underestimate the extent of variation in meaning systems within a society. The dictionary is a product of the process of codification of standard languages and thus closely tied to the notion that words have fixed meanings. Meanings vary between social dialects. They also vary ideologically. The meaning of a word is not an isolated and independent thing. Words and other linguistic expressions enter into many sorts of relationships – relationships of similarity, contrasts, overlap and inclusion. The meaning of a single word depends very much on the relationship of that word to others. Interactional routines are associated with different discourse types. Subjects and situations: the French philosopher Althusser pointed to an important connection between common sense assumptions about meaning and common sense assumptions about social identity (or the subject), perceived as commonsensically given, rather than socially produced. 95 The socialization of people involves coming to be paced in a range of subject positions. The social process of producing social subjects can be conceived of in terms of the positioning of people progressively over a period of years, in a range of subject positions. Social subjects are, in Gramsci’s words “composite personalities”. Foucault argues that the subject is dispersed among the various subject positions: “discourse is not the majestically (uncontested) unfolding of a thinking, knowing, speaking subject, but, on the contrary, a totality, in which the dispersion of the subject and his discontinuity with himself may be determined. The naturalization of the meanings of words is an effective way of constraining the contents of discourse, and in the long term, knowledge and beliefs. So, too, is the naturalization of situation types, which helps to consolidate particular images of the social order. The naturalization of interactional routines is an effective way of constraining the social relations which are enacted in discourse, and of constraining in the longer term a society’s system of social relationships. The naturalization of subject positions constrain subjects, and in the longer term, both contributes to the socialization of persons and to the delimitation of the “stock” of social identities in a given institution or society. Naturalization then, is the most formidable weapon in the armory of power, and also, a significant focus of struggle. Part III: Discourse analysis LANGUAGE AND POWER (Chapters 5-6) E300 Khatib Meeting #12 Tutorial notes prepared by Dr Hayat Al- Chapter 5: Critical Discourse Analysis Practice : Description In CDA textual samples contain features of vocabulary, grammar, punctuation as well as discourse features of turn-taking, types of speech acts and the directness and indirectness of their expression. Close analysis of such features contribute to our understanding of power relations and ideology in discourse. 96 Text analysis is part of discourse analysis. Text, interaction and social context contribute to three levels of corresponding CDA: 1- Description of text 2- Interpretation of the relationship between text and interaction, and 3- Explanation of the relationship between interaction and social context. The set of formal features in a specific text can be regarded as particular choices from among the options in vocabulary and grammar. In order to interpret the features it is generally necessary to take account of what other choices might have been made. Vocabulary: What experiential values do words have in terms of: Classification schemes in terms of which vocabulary is organized in discourse types. Wording Ideological significance Collocation Metaphorical transfer of a word or expression from one domain to another. Overwording shows preoccupation with some aspect of reality which may indicate that it is a focus of ideological struggle. Hyponymy in meaning relations is the case where the meaning of one word is included in the meaning of another word, e.g. family and society. Synonymy is where words have the same meaning. Antonymy is where the meaning of one word is incompatible with the meaning another, e.g. man and woman. What relational values do the words have? The text’s choice of wording depends on and help create social relationships between participants, as well as indicate features of the formality of the occasion. 97 What expressive values do the words have in terms of negative and positive evaluation? What metaphors are used in terms of representing one aspect of experience in terms of another, and the ideological significance of such representation? Grammar What experiential values do grammar features have? What types of processes and participants predominate? Is agency unclear? Are processes what they seem. i.e. processes of one type appearing as processes of another type? Are nominalizations used? Is there absence of agents? Are sentences active or passive? Are sentences positive or negative? What relational values do grammatical features have? What modes (declarative, grammar questions, imperatives are used?) Are direct personal pronouns (you, we) used? And how? What expressive values do grammar features have Declarative may have the expressive value of a request. Grammar questions (wh-questions and yes/no questions)may have the value of a request for information or a suggestion Imperatives may have the value of a suggestion (try moving the antenna) Different Speech Acts may be variously grammaticalized in the three modes. Are there important feactures of expressive modality? Relational modality (writer’s authority) Expressive modality (truth and probability in representing reality, permission and obligation). - Use of pronouns of relational value (we/inclusive) (we/exclusive – writer’s reference) 98 - How are sentences linked together What logical connectors are used (conjunctions) Are complex sentences characterized by coordination or subordination What means are used to refer inside and outside the text (nouns, articles)? Textual Structures What interactional conventions are used? (organizational aspects of discourse). Are there ways in which one participant is controlling the interaction? Interruptions, enforcing explicitness, controlling topic, formulation. Chapter 6: Critical Discourse Analysis Practice: Interpretation, explanation and the position of the Analyst Features of a text have experiential, relational, expressive and connective value. These are related to the three aspects of social practice which may be constrained by power (content, relations and subjects) and their associated structural effects (on knowledge and beliefs, social relationships and social identities). The relationship between text and social structures is an indirect and mediated one. Mediated by the discourse which the text is part of, because the values of textual features only become real and socially operative when they are embedded in social interaction, where texts are produced and interpreted against a background of common-sense assumptions (Members Resources MR). Discourse processes and their dependence on background assumption are the concern of the second stage of the procedure, interpretation. The relationship is mediated, secondly, by the social context of the discourse, because the discourses in which these values are embedded become real and socially operative as parts of institutional and societal processes of struggle. The relationship of discourses to processes of struggle and to power relations is the concern of the third stage of the procedure, explanation. 99 Interpretation: Formal features of a text are “cues” which activate elements of interpreters’ assumptions. Many of these assumptions are ideological there are six levels of interpretation: Two relate to the interpretation of context: situational context: features of the physical situation, properties of the participants, representation of the societal and institutional social orders. Intertextual context: participants assumptions based on the relation of the present discourse to previous discourses. This aspect determines what can be taken, agreed upon or disagreed with. Four levels related to the interpretation of text: Surface utterances: the first level of text interpretation that involves knowledge of the language (phonology, grammar and vocabulary) Meaning of utterance: the second level of interpretation that involves assigning meaning to the constituent parts of a text: sentences, semantic propositions. The analyst combines word meanings and grammar information and work to arrive at meanings for the whole proposition. They also draw upon pragmatic conventions which allow them to determine what speech acts an utterance is being used to perform. Local coherence: the third level of interpretation establishes meaning connections between utterances, producing coherent local interpretations of pairs and sequences of them. Text structure and point: Interpretation of text structure at level form is working out how a whole text hangs together, a text’s overall (global) coherence. This involves matching the text with one of a repertoire of schemata, or representation of characteristic patterns of organization associated with different types of discourse. Schema direct analyst to particular expected patterns or orders in the discourse (greeting, establishing a conversational topic, changing topics, closing off conversation, farewells). The point of a text is a summary interpretation of the text as a whole. The experiential aspect of the point of a text is its overall topic. (see also figure 6.1 page 119) Situational context and discourse type. 100 Social order: societal Determination of institutional setting Social order: institutional Determination of situational setting Situation What is going on? Activity, topic, purpose Who’s involved In what relations What’s the role of Language in what’s going on Discourse type content subjects Relations Connections Speech Acts Speech acts are a central aspect of pragmatics which is concerned with the meanings which participants in a discourse ascribe to elements of a text. The pragmatic properties characterize what the producer is doing: making a statement making a promise, threatening, warning, asking a question, giving an order etc. The producer can be simultaneously doing a number of things, and so single element can have multiple speech act values. 101 The conventions for speech acts which form part of a discourse type embody ideological representations of subjects and their social relationships, asymmetries of rights and obligations between subjects, these may be embedded in asymmetrical rights to ask questions, request action, complain, and asymmetrical obligations. Frames, scripts and schemata Schemata are part of (MR) constituting interpretive procedures for the fourth level of text interpretation, mental representation of aspects of the world. Whereas schemata represent modes of social behaviour, frames represent entities that populate the natural and social world. A frame is whatever representation of a topic, a subject matter or referent within the activity. Related aspects are implicit assumptions, coherence and inferencing. Scripts represent the subjects who are involved in these activities and their relationships. They typify the ways in which specific classes of subjects behave towards each other and how they conduct relationships. There is overlap between all three categories because the three terms identify three very broad dimensions of a highly complex network of mental representation. Explanation The objective of the stage of explanation is to portray a discourse as part of a social process, as a social practice. Explanation has two dimensions processes of struggle processes of power relations As processes of social struggles, they are contextualized in terms of the non-discoursal struggles and the effects of these struggles on structures. As processes revealing power relations, these discourses are the outcome of struggles and are established by those in power. LANGUAGE AND POWER (Chapters 7-8) E300 Meeting #13 Tutorial Notes Prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib ® Language and Power Chapter 7: Creativity and Struggle in Discourse ______________________________________________ 102 Text production develops the concept of the subject in discourse, the subject as having paradoxically properties of being socially determined and yet susceptible to individual creativity. In the course of discussion we will be examining the discourse of Thatcherism. Producing Discourse Text production, social determination and creativity of the subject involve the resolution of problems of various sorts in their relationship to the world and to others: contents, relations and subjects. The problem of the producer may be problematised as to content where some discrepancy arises between the producer's common-sense (ideological) representation of the world, and the world itself when the producer's representation come into contact with other non-compatible representations. A familiar example is where a newspaper tries to deal with some event which appears to conflict with its normal way of representing that part of the world. A producer's position may be problematised in terms of relations in the sense of the social relations between producer and interpreter (s) (addressee, audience). An example might be an interaction where producer and addressee are of different genders. Mixed-gender interaction is widely problematic these days because of the increasingly contested relative social positions of men and women. The position of a producer may be problematised in terms of subjects either in terms of subject position or social identity of the producer or in terms of subject position or social identity of the interpreter(s). Example is the subject position of the teacher when students are narrowing the gap between themselves and their teachers in terms of attaining knowledge or qualifications. The same is true in situations where a politician is trying to maintain or create a commonality of ideology or allegiance among audience. These three types of problems in the position of a producer can be seen as a consequence of discourse conventions becoming destabilized or destructured. In the destructuring of orders of discourse, relatively stable relationship between discourse types and order of discourse come to be interrupted. In other words, producers experience problems because the 103 familiar ways of doing things are no longer straight forwardly available. Producers had to be creative and put together familiar discourse types in novel combinations. The formal features have experiential, relational and expressive values. Producers are to successfully resolve problems through restructuring and achieve harmonization of values where the novel combinations of discourse types come to be naturalized. Although the destructuring and restructuring of the orders of discourse affect individuals and involve individual creativity, their main determinants and effects lie outside the individual, in the struggle between social groupings. What are experienced as social problems can be interpreted socially as indicators of the destructuring of orders of discourse which occur in the course of social struggle. Discourse is a stake as well as a site of social struggle. Individual attempts to resolve problems can be interpreted as moves in social struggle towards the restructuring of orders of discourse. The creativity flourishes in particular social circumstance, when social struggles are constantly de-structuring orders of discourse, and the creativity of the individual is socially constitutive, in the sense that individual creative acts cumulatively establish restructured orders of discourse. The social and the individual, the determined and the creative are facets of a dialectical process of social fixation and transformation. Political Context of Thatcherism Britain has been affected for decades with a process of relative decline as an industrial nation and as a world power. In 1970, Britain suffered from a prolonged crisis in its economy resulting in a general social crisis that intensified industrial struggle, urban decay, crisis in services, upsurge in racism and a widespread division between social classes and genders. Conservative and Labour governments were both ineffectual in dealing with this crisis. Thatcherism was a radical response from the right to these problems and political failures. Thatcherism rejected postwar Conservatism and promised commitments to full employment and the welfare state (leftist slogan). To be able to fulfill its pledges, Thatcherism had to generate and promote new policies. The new mix between traditional Conservative 104 political elements: authoritarian commitment to strengthening the state in defense, law and order, and control over money supply and trade unions was combined with neo-liberal policies of free market unconstrained by state interference. All this had to be "sold" through discourse to appeal to the ordinary citizen, through novel articulation to promote the novel restructurings. In their struggle with political opponents both within their own party as well as outside it, Thatcherites have problematised and deconstructed the political discourse of their opponents and attempted to impose their own restructuring. Thatcherites have been faced also with the problem of how to establish a subject position for a woman political leader in a social context characterized by institutionalized gender-differences (sexism). Articulatory problems included ''selling" the image of the leader: the way she sounds and the way she projects her image. Solutions were in the restructuring of the image and the ideologies. The way she sounds was restructured, with the help of professional tuition, to lower the pitch of her voice and opt for deep quality. She also reduced the speed of her speech to appear more like a statesperson. In terms of political image she had to restructure a feminine image that would also be behaving in a statesmanlike manner. The restructuring included tough, resolute, uncompromising and even aggressive political persona that does not backdown from confrontation with political opponents. The new restructuring needed o be promoted in discourse styles that cater for the content, relations and subject position. Content The content needed to deconstruct ideologies and reconstruct new ones that would be not only acceptable but necessary and successful. Relations Mrs Thatcher and the people Discourse has to take account of the audience in terms of structuring the message, as well as introducing creativity in the interpretation of issues and ideologies. Mrs Thatcher presents herself as the "ordinary person" with ordinary concerns to establish solidarity with the audience. Configuration of her discourse reflects a subject position for the hearer that is constituted indirectly through the way in which Mrs Thatcher represents the experience, beliefs and aspirations of all the people (and therefore claiming their voice as well as representation). 105 Discourse shows different relational values associated with the use of pronouns we (solidarity) and you. Textual features of relational modality of obligation (the use of must, have to, etc.) as well as expressive modality (certainty, probability, categorical truths) express toughness. There are also features when Mrs Thatcher reformulates the focus of the question to introduce a new aspect. Such textual features and discourse styles reflect power in language and discourse strategies used by people who control the discourse. Subject position: the woman political leader The subject position of a woman political leader had to appeal to both genders of the society. As a statesperson who cannot assume absolute masculine characteristics, there had to be restructuring of the characteristics of the leader: toughness not masculinity to cater for the states' affairs, a deep voice, instead of the shrilling feminist emotional pitch, to captivate audience and reflect seriousness of the discussion, and an honest stylish feminine appearance (groomed hair, professional suites). Subject position: the people Any political leader needs to have a social base whom it can claim to represent and can look to for support. Part of what is involve in restructuring subject position for the people who are the target of political discourse is to project onto them a configuration of assumptions, beliefs and values which accord with the novel mix of political elements and constitute authoritarian populism. This is done indirectly. Mrs Thatcher makes many claims in the text about the people which by implication position the audience as representative of the people, with Mrs Thatcher as their speaker. Mrs Thatcher produces lists f assertions, questions, noun phrases and cause-effect clauses, all linked by coordination to give equal weight. These are implicitly connected, with an invitation to the audience to be part of the reconstruction through interpreting the connections. Interpretation Interpretation is conducted by the receivers of the discourse type (audience). Through the process of interpretation audience or receivers of the discourse become part of the reconstruction and align themselves with the promoted ideologies and positions. Explanation 106 Solidarity with the public and the synthetic personalization create a novel social identity that has been reconstructed through discourse types and strategies. Conclusion Discourse types and discourse strategies are characterized by a relationship of containment between novel ideologies and socially influential issues and determinants. This is evident in the case study of Thatcherite discourse. Chapter 8 Discourse in Social Change Discourse is regarded in Critical Language Studies (CLS) as the reflection of social attitudes bringing about changes. Attention to discoursal dimensions brings an awareness of the major social tendencies. A closer examination can determine what part discourse has, in the inception, development and consolidation of social change. Looking at the relationship between certain social tendencies and certain tendencies in orders of discourse can be very informing to linguists. Jurgen Habermas claims that there are systems that work to colonize people's lives. These can be economic; money and power, the state and institutions. Colonization is done through discourse. A societal order of discourse is a particular structuring of constituent institutional orders of discourse. This structuring and desctructuring can be the site of social struggle. Social tendencies are imposed by the dominant bloc, through destructuring previous societal orders of the discourse, and are resisted and contested through discourse. We can think of these restructurings in terms of changes in the salient relationships between discourse types within the societal order of discourse. There are discourse types of consumerism, e.g. discourse of advertisement, and discourse types of bureaucracy e.g. discourse of interviewing. Both discourse types are called by Habermas strategic discourses, discourses oriented to instrumental goals. Strategic discourse is broadly contrasted with communicative discourse, which is oriented to reaching an understanding between participants (although this can also be 107 strategic with specific applications from a person who knows the rules of the game!). The impingements of the economy and the state upon life have resulted in problems and crisis of social identity for many people which have been experienced and dealt with individually rather than through forms of social struggle. Examples of aspects of social order in discourse are: advertising and consumerism, discourse technologies and bureaucracy and the discourse of therapy. Advertising and consumerism There are three dimensions of the ideological work of advertising discourse: the relationship it constructs between the producer/advertiser and the consumer the way it builds an image of the product the way it constructs subject positions for consumers. These dimensions constitute respectively the constraining of relations, content and subjects. Consumerism Consumerism involves a shift in ideological focus from economic production to economic consumption. Consumerism grew out of sets of economic, technological and cultural conditions. Consumerism is the product of mature capitalism when productive capacity is such that an apparently endless variety of commodities can be produced in apparently unlimited quantities, and when the position of the workforce in relation to leisure time and wages leave a significant residue that activate consumerism. Advertisement and the technological development of film, TV and radio promote special products for consumerism. On the other hand they absorb a high proportion of leisure time. As for culture, capitalism, in the process of industrialization and urbanization, has fractured traditional cultural ties associated with the extended family, the local community and religion, etc. In certain circumstances, these traditional ties have been replaced by ties generated by people in the workplace and urban and industrial environments, i.e. ties of class. This leads to changes in their discourse types and strategies. Advertising is of course the most visible practice and discourse, of consumerism. People are exposed to massive daily injections of advertising. The most significant qualitative effect is the constitution of cultural consumption communities. 108 The British Code of Advertising Practice is directed at controlling surface levels features of advertising which relate to its nature as strategic and persuasive communication oriented at selling things. Codes of practice ignore the socially ideological work for advertising: advertising constructs consumption communities through ideology. Advertisements create beliefs in teenagers and the unaware public, and therefore work on ideology: It works on building relations which facilitate the main ideological work It builds images drawing upon ideological elements in their MR in order to establish an image for the product being advertised. It builds the consumer, construct subject positions for consumers, as members of the consumption communities. Verbal and Visual elements in Advertising Visual image underline the reliance of the image building process upon the audience: where visual images are juxtaposed the interpreter (consumer) has to make the connections. Visual images allow advertising to create worlds which consumers may be led to inhibit. Colonizing tendencies in advertising discourse Advertising is conceived of as a colonizer. The extent to which people are exposed to advertising and the effect of advertising on non-economic aspects of life through media and television brings with it the ideologies of the dominant class and brings about the restructuring of family life by imposing specific types of behaviour and promoting specific concepts of beauty, elegance, middle class, to name but a few. Discourse technologies and bureaucracy Discourse technologies are types of discourse which involve the more or less self conscious application of social scientific knowledge for purposes of bureaucratic control. The effect of bureaucracy on orders of discourse is via the colonizing spread of discourse technologies, e.g. skills training, interview. Bureaucracy According to the sociologist Max Weber, a bureaucracy is a 'hierarchical organization designed rationally to coordinate the work of many individuals in the pursuit of large scale administrative tasks and organizational goals'. 109 Discourse technologies Discourse technologies fall within the more general category of strategic discourse, discourse oriented to instrumental goals and results. These are based upon knowledge about discourse itself. This involves the interpretation of power and knowledge. Social skills training Larger units of practice, and discourse, such as an interview, are assumed to be composed of sequences of smaller units which are produced through the application of skills which are selected on the basis of their contribution to the achievement of goals. This involves the manipulation of relational and subjective dimensions of discourse for instrumental reasons. Articulation becomes a discourse technology that includes different institutional orders of discourse. Public information and official forms The transmission of information to the public by bureaucratic organizations, and the solicitation of information from members of the public through official forms, are discourse technologies that have specific format and layout, specific syntax and technical vocabulary. Manipulation of relations and subjects through synthetic personalization, involve easification of aspects of the contents of the text. The two sides of the impingement of the system on people's lives, the economic/consumerist and the bureaucratic/discourse technological increasingly overlap. The powerful consumer subject position constructed in advertising can be made use of for bureaucratic purposes. A common dimension of synthetic personalization is simulated equalization. Direct address of the reader, use of questions instead of imperatives are also strategies to put the producer on equal footing with the reader through selected expressions in language. Synthetic personalization may strengthen the position of the bureaucracy and the state by disguising its instrumental and manipulative relationship to the mass of the people beneath a façade of a personal and equal relationship. The discourse of therapy Further examples of discourse technologies that are not in a direct relationship with bureaucratic rationality are therapeutic technologies, as opposed to disciplinary technologies. These can also be ideological practices. 110 Counselling is a person-to-person form of communication marked by the development of a subtle emotional understanding often described technically as rapport or empathy that is centred upon the problems of the client and is free from authoritarian judgmental or coercive pressures. However the counselor does not only do the listening. He or she offers interpretations that may involve ideological reformulations, that may suggest a new mechanism for achieving and legitimizing social order. Assumptions colonize orders of discourse. In accounting for what is going on discoursally and socially there are indications of increased fragmentation rather than increased integration. Integrating tendencies are manifested in colonizing integrations in the societal orders of the discourse. However, tendencies to fragmentation are manifested in a proliferation of types of discourse. Part III: Discourse analysis LANGUAGE AND POWER (Chapters 8-10) Meeting # 14 E 300 Tutorial Notes Prepared by Dr Hayat Al-Khatib Ch.9: critical language study and social emancipation One of the aims of Critical language study (CLS) is to contribute, through raising awareness, to the emancipation of those who are dominated and oppressed in society. One potential domain where social emancipation could be developed is language education in the school. Critical language awareness, based on CLS should be a significant objective in language education, given the major changes in educational policy and practice which are being implemented or planned. Critical discourse analysis helps to increase consciousness of how language contributes to the domination of some people by others, because consciousness is the first step towards emancipation. Domination in 111 modern society works through “consent” rather than “coercion”, through ideology and through language. Social emancipation is primarily about tangible matters such as unemployment, housing, equality of access to education, the distribution of wealth. Critical language studies or any critical social analysis distinguish objective and subjective conditions. The main objective condition is: the wider social situation must be such as to make progress towards social emancipation feasible. Subjective conditions involve raising the consciousness of dominated groupings of people. There are many social context in our society where CLS might play a part in struggles for social emancipation. Some of these are educational (schools, colleges, on – the – job training, etc.) One context involving professional teachers is the teaching oh English as a Second Language (ESL). Teachers of ESL, (in Britain) deal with some of the most disadvantaged sections of the society, whose experience of racism is particularly sharp. Some of these teachers already see their role in terms of empowering their students, to deal with communicative situations outside the classroom in which institutional power is weighted against them, preparing them to challenge, contradict, and assert themselves, in settings where the power dynamic would expect them to agree, acquiesce, or be silent. The educational process must be grounded in a dialogue about the meaning of power and its encoding in language. The training of workers in public service implicitly involve enormous pressure to adapt their practices in order to meet the purely instrumental criteria of 112 bureaucratic rationality, such as “ efficiency” and “cost- effectiveness”: fewer workers are expected to handle more people. In the media, discourse usually runs to protect the interests of the dominant class. The Minister of Education in Britain Mr. Kenneth Baker in a speech in January 1987 underlines the importance of critical language awareness approach: “Pupils need to know about the workings of the English Language if they are to use it effectively. Most schools no longer teach old – fashioned grammar. But little has been put in its place. There is no common ground on teaching about the structure and workings of the language, about the way it is used to convey meaning and achieve other effects, we need to equip teachers with a proper model of the language to help improve their teaching”. A model of the English Language, whether spoken or written, which would: - Serve as the basis of how teacher are trained to understand now the English Language works. - Inform professional discussion of all aspects of English teaching. The principles which would guide teachers on how far and in what ways the model should be made explicit to pupils, to make them conscious of how language is used in a range of context. What pupils need to know about how the English Language works and in consequence what they should have been taught and be expected to understand on this score at age 7, 11 and 16. The characterization of discourse provides an appropriate model of language for language education, its main elements being text, interaction and context. 113 Two points need to be emphasized: - Discourse is not just a matter of text, or of language form. It should have something to say about interaction or context. - In relation to context, discourse is determined by social relations, and it contributes to shaping social relations. The instrumental views of language education are training-oriented, focusing on the transmission of knowledge and skills, whose content is assumed to be unproblematic and whose social origins are ignored. An example is the concept of literary education, where the transmission of dominant cultural values is passed from one generation to the other. Education, by contrast, is not just passing things on, it is developing the learner's critical consciousness about their environment and critical selfconsciousness, and their capacity to contribute into the shaping and reshaping of the social world. Learners ought to have access to an explicit model of language. This requires "meta language", a language to discuss language, and to talk about texts and interactions and social context. Empowerment has a substantial "stock" potential, and can help people overcome their feeling of powerlessness by showing them that existing orders of discourse are not immutable. The transformation of orders of discourse is a matter of the systematic de-structuring of existing orders and restructuring of new orders. 114 Chapter 10 : Language and power 2000 We need to look at social relations, structures and processes on an international scale if we are to understand and contest the naturalized social orders reflecting the increasing gap between the dominant and the dominated, the rich and poor, inequality And social exclusion, racism, the double exploitation of women as both workers and women. This means that when the focus of analysis is national or local, it is important to recognize that the national and locals are set within an international frame which shapes them. Language is doubly involved in the struggle to impose the neo-liberal. The new ways of being and acting entailed are partly new ways of using language. 115