Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis
Pragmatics and Discourse Analysis
Pragmatics, like discourse analysis, goes beyond structural study of the phrase and focuses on
higher units -speech acts and conversation turns: What is more, it focuses on its object of
study through consideration of the context and its construction, through recognition of
speaker intention, and through the establishment of implicit elements which the hearer has
to access.
Around the beginning of the seventies, impelled by the leap forward that the "thorie
delnonciation" had taken with the differentiation of sentences from propositions, and
propositions from utterances, a group of theories and theorists sought to go beyond the limits
of the sentence, and to engage with the meaning of discourse, that is non-arbitrary sequences
of utterances. In fact, the initial idea was that besides the known linguistic units (phonemes,
morphemes, sintactic constituents and lexical items) belonging to the different levels
characterising a language, one could postulate another new unit of analysis, which went
beyond phrase-level: namely discourse.
The contribution made by pragmatics4
It is plain that discourse analysis has objectives that lie very close to, if not shared by, those
of pragmatics. This is because discourse is none other than a sequence of sentences in
operation -in other words utterances. But while discourse analysts explain the interpretation
of the elements in question without going outside language, pragmatics resorts to other
ambits of human activity (beliefs, feelings, knowledge, intentions). Only in this way can
one explain how utterances are interpreted and how successful interpretation of utterances is
managed. It is only with the aid of considerations of a pragmatic nature that we can go
beyond the question "What does this utterance mean?" and ask "Why was this utterance
produced?".
Ms:
You should hurry up a little in persuading the PSOE, because we're all in a hurry to do
all that5.
Mr :
To know why Mr asks the question, we need to bear in mind quite a number of considerations
of a pragmatic nature, for example, the degree of relevance of the question:
Conclusion
What we have presented here, then, is a rapid approximation to the complexity of discourse,
plus a series of concepts, taken from pragmatic theory and the theory of argumentation which
may make the analysis clearer. We have seen that the concessive orientation is the most
habitual in the type of political debate analysed here, followed by the consecutive
orientation. The conclusive mode, on the other hand, is not found so frequently, except in the
chunks of monologue, the parts of the discourse which the speakers had partially prepared
-occurring in the first few minutes and closing minutes of the debate. The pragmatic markers
that work to indicate these orientations constitute a restricted list, and in
any case may be omitted. Comparative analysis of the argumentative orientations in the
speech of the different politicians analysed in this article, may make it considerably clearer to
us, why they are more, or less, effective.
The writer decides where to start the sentence and the beginning of each sentence is its
theme. The rest of the sentence tells the reader something about the theme. That the rest of
the sentence is called rheme.The theme is the framework of the point of the departure of the
message. The rheme is what the addresser wants to convey about the theme (McCarthy:
1991). Halliday (1994) describes the theme-rheme dichotomy. First, the theme is marked in
intonation as a separate tone unit, frequently followed by a brief pause. Second, only the
basic
elements of the kernel structure can become topic themes: the process (main verb), the
participants (subject and object) and the circumstantial factor (adveriables). In English, three
possible themes are found: Textual theme (discourse markers and conjunctions) +
interpersonal theme (vocative) + topic theme (SVOA elements).
Ellipsis
The relation between substitution and ellipsis is very close because it is merely that ellipsis
is substitution by zero (0). What is essential in ellipsis is that some elements are omitted
from the surface text, but they are still understood. Thus, omission of these elements can be
recovered by referring to an element in the preceding text .Harmer defines it: () words are
deliberately left out of a sentence when the meaning is still clear. (Harmer, 2004:24).On
considering the following example:
Penny was introduced to a famous author, but even before, she had recognized him. It
appeared that the structure of the second clause indicates that there is something left out
introduced to a famous author, the omission of this feature kept the meaning still clear and
there is no need of repetition; Carter et al state that ellipsis occurs in writing where usually
e.g.1: Every one who [can] donate time to a charity should do so.
e.g.2: Every one who can donate time to a charity should
Conjunction
Conjunction is achieved to have grammatical cohesion in texts which show the relationship
between sentences. They are different from other cohesive, ties that they reach the meaning
by using other features in the discourse.
Discourse analysis
The mode of analysis which subsequently grew into DA began with a problem. Sociologists have had
a long-standing interest in science and its relationship to wider society. They had studied a variety of
topics: the organisation of the scientific community (Crane, 1972; Hagstrom, 1965); the norms of
scientific practice (Merton, 1973); the relationship between science and public funding, ORIGINS
AND ORIENTATIONS 13 Woofit-01.qxd 2/16/2005 11:05 AM Page 13 and wider political
developments (Sklair, 1973); and the processes which informed revolutionary developments in
scientific knowledge (Kuhn, 1970).
Differences The discussion of the differences between conversation analysis and discourse analysis
will be organised around various substantive and methodological issues. Substantive issues In this
section we examine the different kinds of substantive topics or issues which are studied in
conversation analysis and discourse analysis. Analysing actions vs analysing action orientations in
accounting practices In this section I will try to identify in general terms broad differences in the focus
of empirical research. I will argue that, as a heuristic, it is useful to identify the core analytic concern
of CA as the study of social action through language, and to identify the core analytic concern of DA
as the investigation of the way that accounts and formulations display an action orientation. But
before I go on to articulate this distinction, it is important to acknowledge that there are some blurry
areas where this distinction does not hold. Conversation analytic studies of interaction, on the whole,
tend to exhibit specific methodological characteristics, and there is a consistent style to formal
published studies. There is, however, greater diversity in discourse analytic research, in terms of both
the treatment of data and the range of analytic issues being explored, and some later discourse analytic
studies have much in common with conversation analytic research. For example, the data in Edwards
(1995a) analysis of interaction in a relationship counselling session are transcribed according to CA
conventions, and his analytic claims are grounded in close description of the activities
A discourse community utilizes and hence possesses one or more genres in the
communicative furtherance of its aims
Genre
Genres are simply assemblies of more-or-less similar textual objects but, instead, are coded
and keyed events set within social communicative processes. Recognizing those codes and
keys can be a powerful facilitator of both comprehension and composition
Genre often coincide with speech events, but must be treated as analytically independent of
them. They may occur in (or as) different events. The sermon as a genre its typically
identified with a certain place in a church service, but its properties may be evoked, for
serious or humorous effect, in other situations
A Working Definition of Genre
The principal criterial feature that turns a collection of communicative events into a
genre is some shared set of communicative purposes
Genre analysis
Ever since the early conceptualisation of genre theory in the United Kingdom in 1980s I have
been partly instrumental in developing it from a purely linguistic analysis of academic and
professional genres to the analysis of professional practices and disciplinary cultures, thus
integrating textual, strategic or socio-pragmatic, and other critical aspects of genre
construction, interpretation, use, and exploitation in various professional contexts. What I
would like to do in this narrative is to offer purely personal reflections on some of the critical
developments in this theory in the last three decades.
Conclusion
Returning to Hasans (1985:114) claim that verbal identity and generic identity of a text
are not probabilistically related, it seems that this is only true when we see generic
identity at a level which excludes goal-types. On the other hand, if we take the structure
of speech act episodes as an analytical category, certain patterns between lexicogrammar,
discourse, and genre orientation become apparent. The nature of agency in
such episodes is an important indicator for generic activity and is easily overlooked in
the wider schema of the generic structure of texts. However, the pilot study above is
based on a relatively small set of data and not too much should be claimed for it until
further research has confirmed the results.