End of Chapter 8
Chapter 9 Language and Literature
[In this chapter, we only deal with a surface of many literary terms. For more detailed information, please refer to my notes on American and British literature. – icywarmtea]
9.1 Theoretical background
1. Style: Style refers to variation in a person’s speech or writing or a particular person’s use of speech or writing at all times or to a way of speaking or writing at a particular period of time.
2. Stylistics: According to H. G. Widdowson, stylistics is the study of literary discourse from a linguistic orientation. He treated literature as discourse, thus adopting a linguistic approach. This brings literature and linguistics closer.
9.2 Some general features of the literary language
9.2.1 Foregrounding and grammatical form
1. Foregrounding: Foreground refers to the part of a scene nearest to the viewer, or figuratively the most noticeable position. Foregrounding means to put something or someone in the most essential part of the description or narration, other than in a background position.
2. In literary texts, the grammatical system of the language is often exploited, experimented with, or in Mukarovsky’s words, made to “deviate from other, more everyday, forms of language, and as a result creates interesting new patterns in form and in meaning.
9.2.2 Literal language and figurative language
1. Literal language: The first meaning for a word that a dictionary definition gives is usually called literal meaning.
2. Figurative language: A. k. a. trope, which refers to language used in a figurative way for a rhetorical purpose.
We can use some figures of speech such as simile, metaphor, metonymy, synecdoche, etc.
9.2.3 The analysis of literary language
(Omit. Refer to p288-290 of the textbook.)
9.3 The language in poetry
[Nothing special here in this note. Please refer to my note named “Selected Readings of American Literature, p9-10. – icywarmtea]
9.3.1 Sound patterning
9.3.2 Different forms of sound patterning
1. Rhyme (end rhyme): The last word of a line has the same final sounds as the last word of another line, sometimes immediately above or below, sometimes one or more lines away (cVC).
2. Alliteration: The initial consonants are identical in alliteration (Cvc).
3. Assonance: Assonance describes syllables with a common vowel (cVc).
4. Consonance: Syllables ending with the same consonants are described as having consonance (cvC).
5. Reverse rhyme: Reverse rhyme describes syllables sharing the vowel and initial consonant (CVc).
6. Pararhyme: Where two syllables have the same initial and final consonants, but different vowels, they pararhyme (CvC).
7. Repetition: A complete match of the syllable (CVC).
9.3.3 Stress and metrical patterning
1. Iamb: An iambic foot contains two syllables, an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed one.
2. Trochee: A trochaic foot contains two syllables as well, but in this case, the stressed syllable comes first, followed by an unstressed syllable.
3. Anapest: An anapestic foot consists of three syllables; two unstressed syllables are followed by a stressed one.
4. Dactyl: A dactylic foot is similar to anapest, except reversed – a stressed syllable is followed by two unstressed ones.
5. Spondee: A spondaic foot consists of two stressed syllables; lines of poetry rarely consist only of spondees.
6. Pyrrhic: A pyrrhic foot consists of two unstressed syllables.
7. Metrical patterning
(1) Dimeter
(2) Trimeter
(3) Tetrameter
(4) Pentameter
(5) Hexameter
(6) Heptameter
(7) Octameter
9.3.4 Conventional forms of meter and sound
1. Couplets: Couplets are two lines of verse, usually connected by a rhyme.
2. Quatrains: Stanzas of four lines, known as quatrains, are very common in English poetry.
3. Blank verse: Blank verse consists of lines in iambic pentameter which do not rhyme.
9.3.5 The poetic functions of sound and meter
1. For aesthetic pleasure
2. To conform to a convention / style / form
3. To express or innovate with a form
4. To demonstrate technical skill, and for intellectual pleasure
5. For emphasis or contrast
6. Onomatopoeia
9.3.6 How to analyze poetry?
1. Read a poem more than once.
2. Keep a dictionary and use it. Other reference books will also be invaluable. A good book on mythology and a Bible.
3. Read so as to hear the sounds of the words in your mind. Poetry is written to be heard: its meanings are conveyed through sound as well as through print. One should read a poem as slowly as he can. Lip reading is a good habit.
4. Always pay careful attention to what the poem is saying. One should make an effort to follow the thought continuously and to grasp the full implications and suggestions.
5. As aids to the understanding of a poem, we may ask some questions about.
(1) Who is the speaker and what kind of person is he?
(2) To whom is he speaking? What kind of person is he?
(3) What is the occasion?
(4) What is the setting in time (time of day, season, century)?
(5) What is the setting in place (in doors or out, city or country, nation)?
(6) What is the central purpose of the poem?
(7) State the central idea or theme of the poem in a sentence.
(8) Discuss the tone of the poem. How is it achieved?
(9) Outline the poem so as to show its structure and development; or summarize the events of the poems.
(10) Paraphrase the poem.
(11) Discuss the diction of the poem. Point out words that are particularly well chosen and explain why.
(12) Discuss the imagery of the poem. What kinds of imagery are used?
(13) Point out examples of metaphor, simile, personification, and metonymy, etc., and explain their appropriateness.
(14) Point out and explain any symbols.
(15) Point out and explain examples of paradox, overstatement, understatement and irony. What is their function?
(16) Point and explain any allusions. What is their function?
(17) Point out significant examples of sound repetition and explain their function.
(18) What is the meter of the poem? Copy the poem and mark its scansion.
(19) Discuss the adaptation of sound to sense.
(20) Describe the form or pattern of the poem.
(21) Criticize and evaluate the poem.
9.4 The language in fiction
9.4.1 Fictional prose and point of view
1. First-person narrator (I-narrator): The person who tells the story may also be a character in the fictional world of the story, relating the story after the event. In this case, the critics call the narrator a first-person narrator or an I-narrator because when the narrator refers to himself or herself in the story the first person pronoun “I” is used.
2. Third-person narrator: If the narrator is not a character in the fictional world, he or she is usually called a third-person narrator, because reference to all the characters in the fictional world of the story will involve the use of the third-person pronouns, he, she, it or they.
3. Deixis: A term for a word or phrase which directly relates an utterance to a time, place, or a person.
9.4.2 Speech and thought presentation
1. Speech presentation
(1) Direct speech (DS): A kind of speech presentation in which the character said in its fullest form.
(2) Indirect speech (IS): A kind of speech presentation in which the speaker’s words are not reported as they were actually said.
(3) Free indirect speech (FIS): A further category which is an amalgam of direct and indirect speech features.
(4) Narrator’s representation of speech acts (NRSA): A minimalist kind of presentation in which a part of passage can be seen as a summary of a longer piece of discourse, and therefore even more back-grounded than indirect representation would be.
(5) Narrator’s representation of speech (NRS): A possibility of speech presentation which is more minimalist than narrator’s representation of speech acts, namely a sentence which merely tells us the speech occurred, and which does not even specify the speech acts involved.
2. Thought presentation
(1) Direct thought (DT): Direct thought tends to be used for presenting conscious, deliberative thought. E.g. “He will be late,” she thought.
(2) Indirect thought (IT): A kind of categories used by novelists to represent the thoughts of their characters are exactly as that used to present indirect speech. E.g. She thought that he would be late.
(3) Free indirect thought (FIS): A kind of mixture of direct and indirect features. E.g. He was bound to be late!
(4) Narrator’s representation of thought acts (NRTA): A kind of categories used by novelists to represent the thoughts of their characters is exactly as that used to present speech acts. E.g. She considered his unpunctuality.
(5) Narrator’s representation of speech (NRS): A possibility of speech presentation which is more minimalist than narrator’s representation of speech acts, namely a sentence which merely tells us the speech occurred, and which does not even specify the speech acts involved.
(6) Stream of consciousness writing: The term stream of consciousness was originally coined by the philosopher William James in his Principle of Psychology (1890) to describe the free association of ideas and impressions in the mind. It was later applied to the writing of William Faulkner, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and others experimenting early in the 20th century with the novelistic portrayal of the free flow of thought.
9.4.3 Prose style
1. Authorial style: When people talk of style, they usually mean authorial style. This refers to the “world view” kind of authorial style. In other words a way of writing which recognizably belongs to a particular writer, say Jane Austin or Earnest Hemingway.
2. Text style: Text style looks closely at how linguistic choices help to construct textual meaning. Just as authors can be said to have style, so can text.
9.4.4 How to analyze the language of fiction?
1. Patterns of lexis (vocabulary);
2. Patterns of grammatical organization;
3. Patterns of textual organization (how the units of textual organization, from sentences to paragraphs and beyond, are arranged);
4. Fore-grounded features, including figures of speech (rhetorical devices);
5. Whether any patterns of style variation can be discerned;
6. Discoursal patterning of various kinds, like turn-taking or patterns of inferencing;
7. Patterns of viewpoint manipulation, including speech and thought presentation.
9.5 The language in drama
(Omit)
End of Chapter 9
Chapter 10 Language and Computer
[I believe there are very few universities need this chapter. But for the integrality of the note, I will put up the note, although mainly the subtitles. – icywarmtea]
What is computational linguistics?
Computational linguistics is a branch of applied linguistics, dealing with computer processing of human language.
(1) It includes the analysis of language data so as to establish the order in which learners acquire various grammatical rules or the frequency of occurrence of some particular item.
