Transcript Meaning

Pragmatics
Interpersonal function
Austinian Speech Acts
Gricean Conversational Maxims
English 306A; Harris
1
Speech acts
Conversational maxims
I can’t find any whisky!
Sam-I-Am’s
been here.
English 306A; Harris
2
Meaning
Semantics
Propositions
Truth/falsity
Context-free
Language-in-vitro
Pragmatics
Utterances
Appropriateness
Context-dependent
Language-in-vivo
English 306A; Harris
3
Functions
Ideational function:
What does “The cat is on the mat” mean as an expression in
the system of English?
How?
Denotation, truth conditions, event schemata, semantic
roles, …
Interpersonal function:
What does “The cat is on the mat” mean to hearer X, when
said by speaker Y, in context Z?
How?
Speech acts, conversational maxims, face principles,
deixis, …
English 306A; Harris
4
Functions
Ideational function:
What does “The cat is on the mat” mean as an expression in
the system of English?
How?
Denotation, truth conditions, event schemata, semantic
roles, …
Interpersonal function:
What does “The cat is on the mat” mean to hearer X, when
said by speaker Y, in context Z?
How?
Speech acts, conversational maxims, face principles,
deixis, …
English 306A; Harris
5
Ideational function
What we’ve been studying to this point:
Language from the perspective of encoding ideas, and the mechanics of
transmitting those ideas, within the system of a language.
English 306A; Harris
6
Interpersonal function
Language from the perspective of making and
maintaining human contact, so we can
coöperate, negotiate, decide, get along, build
bridges, and generally function as social
animals.
English 306A; Harris
7
Interpersonal function
A supplement to the ideational function—not a
substitute—but a crucial supplement.
The ideational function is necessary, but not
sufficient.
English 306A; Harris
8
Interpersonal function
Phatic communion
social contact
Communicative
mental contact
English 306A; Harris
9
Interpersonal function
Phatic
The use of language to establish or maintain
social relations
Sam!
English 306A; Harris
10
Phatic
Utterances whose
chief function is to
establish or maintain
contact; much like
canine gluteusmaximus reciprocal
olfactory analysis.
Hi, Hello, yo, …
How are you, How’s it going,
How’s it hanging, …
Live long and prosper, Keep on
truckin, Keep it real, …
Nice weather, Cold enough for
you?, Hope the rain don’t
hurt the rhubarb, ….
English 306A; Harris
11
Interpersonal function
Communicative
The use of language to encode and transmit
intentions
I will try them.
You will see.
English 306A; Harris
12
Interpersonal function
Communicative
The use of language to encode and transmit
intentions
I will try them.
You will see.
English 306A; Harris
13
Interpersonal function
Communicative
The use of language to encode and transmit
intentions
Take, for instance, the
utterance, If you will let me be,
I will try them. You will see.
Ideationally, it’s just a pair of
propositions.
Communicatively, it’s a
surrender, a capitulation, a
collapse of my resolve, and a
prediction that I won’t like your
damn viridescent chow!
English 306A; Harris
14
Communicative
Utterances whose
chief function is to
share mental contents
Information
Attitudes
Worldviews
The cat is on the mat.
Homer eats crap.
Huh?
Try them, try them, and you
may, I say.
My kingdom for a horse.
Please put the lid back down.
Put the F&^#ing lid down!
e = mc2
English 306A; Harris
15
Phatic and Communicative
=
Sam!
If you will let
me be, I will
try them.
You will see.
English 306A; Harris
16
Phatic and Communicative
Every utterance has both
phatic and communicative
dimensions.
English 306A; Harris
17
Speech Acts & Conversational
Maxims
J. L. Austin
People do things with words beyond asserting
truth. We act through speech.
H.P. Grice
The way people coordinate their
speech is very intricate. We follow maxims.
English 306A; Harris
18
English 306A; Harris
19
Speech acts
Locution
the utterance of a sentence with
specific denotation
Illocution
the making of a statement, offer,
promise, …
Perlocution
the bringing about of effects on the
audience by means of uttering a
sentence (persuading,
entertaining, scaring, …)
English 306A; Harris
20
Speech acts
Locution
the utterance of a sentence with
specific denotation
Illocution
the making of a statement, offer,
promise, …
Perlocution
the bringing about of effects on the
audience by means of uttering a
sentence (persuading, entertaining,
scaring, …)
English 306A; Harris
21
Speech acts
Locution
the utterance of a sentence with
specific denotation
Illocution
= the speech act
Perlocution
the bringing about of effects on the
audience by means of uttering a
sentence (persuading, entertaining,
scaring, …)
English 306A; Harris
22
pronouncement
pronouncement
Illocutions/
Speech Acts
Felicity
Conditions
statement
confirmation
(iconic
statement)
despisement
English 306A; Harris
23
Illocutions/
Speech Acts
The physical and social conditions
under which a speech act can be
performed
Felicity
Conditions
despisement
English 306A; Harris
24
Felicity
Conditions
The physical and social conditions
under which a speech act can be
performed
I christen thee
“The Good Ship
Lollypop”!
English 306A; Harris
25
Acts through speech
Offer, decline, accept, promise, bet, warn, threaten, suggest, advise,
declare, marry, christen, compliment, insult, joke, …
Felicity conditions: appropriate intentions; appropriate circumstances;
appropriate actions.
Try them! Try them! Try
them and you may I say!
Sam!
If you will let me be, I
will try them. You will
see.
English 306A; Harris
26
Categories of speech acts
(Dirven and Verspoor, Table 1, chapter 7)
Constitutive
Ritualized social circumstances (thank someone
when something has been exchanged, sentence at
termination of trial, pronunciation of marriage,…);
utterance primarily constitutes act.
Informative
Communicate, or request communication of information
(assert facts, question truth of facts, solicit the
completion of an assertion, …); utterance primarily
engages in trafficing information.
Obligative
Commit self or solicit others to do something (offer
assistance, request favour, make a bet, …); utterance
primarily concerns future conduct.
English 306A; Harris
27
Categories of speech acts
(Dirven and Verspoor, Table 1, chapter 7)
Expressive
Constitutive
Declarative
thanking, apologizing,
…
sentencing, pronouncing, …
Informative
Communicate, or request communication of information
(assert facts, question truth of facts, solicit the
completion of an assertion, …); utterance primarily
engages in trafficing information.
Obligative
Commit self or solicit others to do something (offer
assistance, request favour, make a bet, …); utterance
primarily concerns future conduct.
English 306A; Harris
28
Categories of speech acts
(Dirven and Verspoor, Table 1, chapter 7)
Declarative
thanking, apologizing,
…
sentencing, pronouncing, …
Assertive
asserting, describing, …
Interrogative
asking
Expressive
Constitutive
Informative
Obligative
Commit self or solicit others to do something (offer
assistance, request favour, make a bet, …); utterance
primarily concerns future conduct.
English 306A; Harris
29
Final Exam
English 306A
University of Waterloo Final Examination
FALLTERM 20 1 0
7:30 - 10:00 PM!
Thursday
Student Name
____________________________________ __________
Student ID Number
____________________________________ __________
Course Number
English 306A
Course Title
Int roduct ion t o Lingu ist ics
Section
01
Held With Course(s)
Section(s) of Held With Courses(s)
n/a
n/a
Instructor
Randy Harris
Date of Exam
Time Period
T hursday, 16 December 10
7:30 P M - 10:00 PM
T wo and a half hours
Duration of Exam
16 December
Number of Exam Pages
(including this cover sheet)
1
Exam Type
Fina l
mult iple-choice
t rue-false
ext ra -credit short answer
Format
RCH 305
Worth
50 % of course grade
None
Additional Materials Allowed
Marking scheme
Ext ra-credit
Sect ion I
Sect ion II
60 %
10
40 %
30 questions
1 Event Schemata Analysis
40 questions
2% each right answer
10 for fully correct analysis;
partial marks for correct
role-assignments.
1% each right answer
English 306A; Harris
-0.5 % each wrong answer
30
Your 306A Grade
Greater of (M1 + M2 + F) OR F
i.e., 100% Final, if it helps
English 306A; Harris
31
Categories of speech acts
(Dirven and Verspoor, Table 1, chapter 7)
Declarative
thanking, apologizing,
…
sentencing, pronouncing, …
Assertive
asserting, describing, …
Interrogative
asking
Directive
requesting, ordering, …
Commissive
promising, offering, …
Expressive
Constitutive
Informative
Obligative
English 306A; Harris
32
Acts through speech
Speech acts: offer, decline, accept, promise, bet, warn, threaten,
suggest, advise, declare, marry, christen, compliment, insult, joke,
…
Felicity conditions: appropriate intentions;
appropriate circumstances;
appropriate actions.
English 306A; Harris
33
H. P. Grice
English 306A; Harris
34
How to talk
Make your conversational
contribution such as is
required, at the stage at
which it occurs, by the
accepted purpose or
direction of the talkexchange in which you are
engaged.
English 306A; Harris
35
How to talk
Coöperate.
English 306A; Harris
36
How we do, in fact, talk
Coöperate.
English 306A; Harris
37
And how we listen, too
Coöperate.
English 306A; Harris
38
How to talk, more specifically
Grice’s Maxims
Relation
Be relevant.
Quality
Be truthful.
Quantity
Be sufficient
(but not prolix).
Manner
Be perspicacious.
English 306A; Harris
39
How to talk and interpret; conversational
implicature
Grice’s Maxims
Not moral or social injunctions
Empirically derived principles
Maxims that people naturally follow,
and generally expect others to
follow
To speak
To understand (conversational
implicature)
Observable mostly in violation
English 306A; Harris
40
Maxim of relation
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be relevant.
A1: Yep, there’s a gas station at
King and Weber. [closed]
A2: Nope, you’ll have to go all the
way to Erb Street;
everything’s closed around
here because of the anthrax
scare.
English 306A; Harris
41
Maxim of quality
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be truthful.
Say what you believe to
be true.
Don’t say what you
believe to be false.
English 306A; Harris
42
Maxim of quality
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be truthful.
Say what you believe to be
true.
Don’t say what you believe to
be false.
A1: Nope. [ommitting that there
is gas bar at the Canadian
Tire.]
A2: Well, there’s a gas bar, if you
just need some gas.
English 306A; Harris
43
Maxim of quality
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be truthful.
Say what you believe to be
true.
Don’t say what you believe to
be false.
A1: Nope. [false; there is one]
A2: Yep, two lights up on the left
there’s a new Petrosaurus
Station.
English 306A; Harris
44
Maxim of quantity
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Provide enough information
But not too much
A1: Yep.
A2: Sure, King and Erb.
A3: Yep, King and Erb.
They have a sale on
gumboots at the
hardware store across
the street from it, too.
English 306A; Harris
45
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be clear
Don’t be obscure
Don’t be ambiguous
Be brief
Be orderly
English 306A; Harris
46
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Tell me where I can get gas. I need it and I’m a
stranger.)
Be clear
Yes. Somewhere near the
theatre.
Don’t be obscure
Don’t be ambiguous
Be brief
Be orderly
English 306A; Harris
47
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Do you know where I can get some gas? I’m a stranger)
Be clear
Don’t be obscure
Yep. Next to the old Smith
place.
Don’t be ambiguous
Be brief
Be orderly
English 306A; Harris
48
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Do you know where I can get some gas? I’m a stranger)
Be clear
Don’t be obscure
Don’t be ambiguous
Maybe there is, maybe
there isn’t.
Be brief
Be orderly
English 306A; Harris
49
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Do you know where I can get some gas? I’m a stranger)
Be clear
Don’t be obscure
Don’t be ambiguous
Be brief
Sure quite a few. I know where every gas
station built in the KW area since the Great
War was located. First, there was the Ollie
Petrie Service Station at the corner of …
Be orderly
English 306A; Harris
50
Maxim(s) of manner
Is there a gas station around here?
(=Do you know where I can get some gas? I’m a stranger)
Be clear
Don’t be obscure
Don’t be ambiguous
Be brief
Be orderly
Sure. At Erb, turn right off King. To get to King,
take Westmount, and turn left when you get there.
Before that, go three lights down University and
turn left at Westmount. First, however, …
English 306A; Harris
51
How to listen
(Conversational implicature)
[T]hough some maxim is
violated at the level of what
is said, the hearer is
entitled to assume that
that maxim, or at least the
overall cooperative
principle, is observed at the
level of what is implicated.
English 306A; Harris
52
Grice’s Maxims
The important point:
Grice charted the many,
many ways we coordinate
our speech to each other’s
needs and expectations.
English 306A; Harris
53
Intention; figuration
All language dialogic (conversational).
Grice’s maxims form a baseline of expectations.
Figures of thought (tropes) function by violating maxims,
deviating from baseline.
The ‘first reading’ doesn’t make sense, so hearers figure
out the speaker’s intention--not what the utterance
means, but what the speaker means by that
utterance.
English 306A; Harris
54
Metonymy
English 306A; Harris
55
Metonymy
Violates quality
English 306A; Harris
56
Metonymy
Violates quality
Satisfies relation,
quantity, manner
English 306A; Harris
57
Metaphor
My love is red,
red rose.
English 306A; Harris
58
Metaphor
My love is red,
red rose.
Violates quality
English 306A; Harris
59
Metaphor
My love is red,
red rose.
Violates quality
Satisfies relation,
quantity, manner
English 306A; Harris
60
Repetitio
My love is red,
red rose.
Violates manner
(brevity)
Satisfies relation,
quantity, quality
English 306A; Harris
61
Polyptoton
Violates manner
(brevity)
Satisfies relation,
quantity, quality
English 306A; Harris
62
Polyptoton
Violates manner
(brevity)
Satisfies relation,
quantity, quality
English 306A; Harris
63
Irony
Lovely day!
English 306A; Harris
64
Irony
Lovely day!
Violates quality
English 306A; Harris
65
Irony
Lovely day!
Violates quality
Satisfies relation,
quantity, manner
English 306A; Harris
66
Paronomasia
English 306A; Harris
67
Paronomasia
Violates manner
(clarity)
English 306A; Harris
68
Paronomasia
Violates manner
(clarity)
Satisfies relation,
quantity, quality
English 306A; Harris
69
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What do you read, my lord?
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
70
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What do you read, my lord?
Words, words, words.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
71
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What do you read, my lord?
Words, words, words.
Violates quantity and relation
(Satisfies quality and mostly manner)
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
72
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What is the matter, my lord?
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
73
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What is the matter, my lord?
Between whom?
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
74
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
What is the matter, my lord?
Between whom?
Violates relation
(satisfies quantity,
manner, … quality?)
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
75
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
I mean the matter that you read,
my lord.
Slanders, sir; for the satirical rogue says
here that old men have grey beards, that
their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging
thick amber and plumtree gum, and that
they have plentiful lack of wit, together
with most weak hams; all of which though I
most powerfully and potently believe, yet I
hold it not honesty to have set it thus
down, for yourself, sir, shall grow old as I
am, if like a crab you could go backward.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
76
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
I mean the matter that you read,
my lord.
Slanders, sir; for the satirical rogue says
here that old men have grey beards, that
their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging
thick amber and plumtree gum, and that
they have plentiful lack of wit, together
with most weak hams; all of which though I
most powerfully and potently believe, yet I
hold it not honesty to have set it thus
down, for yourself, sir, shall grow old as I
am, if like a crab you could go backward.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
77
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
I mean the matter that you read,
my lord.
Slanders, sir; for the satirical rogue says
here that old men have grey beards, that
their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging
thick amber and plumtree gum, and that
they have plentiful lack of wit, together
with most weak hams; all of which though I
most powerfully and potently believe, yet I
hold it not honesty to have set it thus
down, for yourself, sir, shall grow old as I
am, if like a crab you could go backward.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
78
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
I mean the matter that you read,
my lord.
Slanders, sir; for the satirical rogue says
here that old men have grey beards, that
their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging
thick amber and plumtree gum, and that
they have plentiful lack of wit, together
with most weak hams; all of which though I
most powerfully and potently believe, yet I
hold it not honesty to have set it thus
down, for yourself, sir, shall grow old as I
am, if like a crab you could go backward.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
79
Now, for the high-brow stuff
Polonius:
I mean the matter that you read,
my lord.
Slanders, sir; for the satirical rogue says
here that old men have grey beards, that
their faces are wrinkled, their eyes purging
thick amber and plumtree gum, and that
they have plentiful lack of wit, together
with most weak hams; all of which though I
most powerfully and potently believe, yet I
hold it not honesty to have set it thus
down, for yourself, sir, shall grow old as I
am, if like a crab you could go backward.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
80
Now, for the high-brow stuff
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
81
I ask to be, or not to be.
That is the question, I ask of me.
This sullied life, it makes me shudder.
My uncle's boffing dear, sweet mother.
Would I, could I take my life?
Could I, should I, end this strife?
Should I jump out of a plane?
Or throw myself before a train?
Should I from a cliff just leap?
Could I put myself to sleep?
…
To sleep, to dream, now there's the rub.
I could drop a toaster in my tub.
English 306A; Harris
Hamlet
82
Pragmatics
Interpersonal function
Phatic and Communicative
Speech acts
Informative, Constitutive, and Obligative
Grice’s Maxims
The coöperative principle (and its ramifications)
Speaking and understanding (conversational implicature)
English 306A; Harris
83