1 / 30

Stylistics II

Lecture # 21. Stylistics II. A branch of applied linguistics concerned with the study of style in texts , especially (but not exclusively) in literary works .

selima
Download Presentation

Stylistics II

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture # 21 Stylistics II

  2. A branch of applied linguistics concerned with the study of style in texts, especially (but not exclusively) in literary works. linguistic stylistics - the description of literary texts by methods derived from general linguistic theory, using the categories of the description of language as a whole. Review of lecture 20

  3. A comparison of each text by the same or by different authors in the same and in different genres. Technically speaking, stylistics is the study of the linguistic features of a literary text - phonological, lexical, syntactical Review of lecture 20

  4. Merits & Demerits of some definitions Style as an embellishment – just ornamentation Style as choice between alternate expression Review of lecture 20

  5. 3 & 4. Style as a set of individual or collected characteristics The emphasis on individual element of style quite important – it must be allowed for in all linguistic studies. Almost all writers have their individual individuality – readers can identify their writing Stylistics II (merits & demerits – contd..)

  6. Sometimes it can be done objectively by statistical counts of frequencies of linguistical features in limited contexts. Still it becomes difficult to identify style with individual expression. First, some features taken as stylistic as not individual – they are found in others as well Stylistics II

  7. Third, how can we separate the ‘unique and inimitable’ features of a given style from all the other features necessarily present in the text we are studying. Individual modes of expression form a category too special to give us a general basis for an ideally powerful style definition Stylistics II

  8. The identification of style with the individual elements of language pre-supposes the setting up of norms of comparison. Definition of style as a set of individual features/characteristics is unsatisfactory. It fails to pin-point the expressive characteristics which are clearly indicative of style Stylistics II

  9. 5. Style as deviation from a norm Such definition could be useful if they could define both the norm and the deviations in concrete and operational terms. Such definitions fail to establish a precise relationship between text and norm Stylistics II

  10. The question how norm- defining features are different from general features of style still unanswered Norm-defining features may be stated in terms of metre (‘heroic couplets’), time (Elizabethan style), place (‘Yank humour’), language, dialect, writer (‘Shakespearean style’), literary work (‘Byronic style’), Stylistics II

  11. School of writers (‘metaphysical’, ‘romantic’), genre (‘poetic style, journalese’), social situation (a brigadier addressing to a brigade, or a principal speaking to his students), and so forth. All such norms seem to be roughly circumscribed by context, including time, place and situation. Stylistics II

  12. It becomes evident that it is difficult to separate style from context. No way to know what an accepted norm is 5. Style as set of those relations among linguistic entities that are stable in terms of wider spans of text than the sentence Prof. Hill’s definition is important here. Stylistics II

  13. Prof. Hill has defined stylistics as concerning all those relations among linguistic entities which are stable or maybe stable in terms of wider spans than those within the limits of the sentence. This definition too is inadequate. Stylistics II

  14. It neither conflicts with the view of style as choice or as tabulation of alternatives, nor rules out the study of frequencies and probabilities on style determination. Even a single sentence possesses style and one cannot write a single sentence without style. Concept of spans not so much stylistic as grammatical Stylistics II

  15. Linguistic Approach To Style Style in literature is a recognizable but elusive phenomenon Part of difficulty in discussing style is because of temptation to attempt simutaneous answers to linguistic, pragmatic, and aesthetic questions concerned with different levels of, and attitudes to, the communication process. Stylistics II

  16. Present day linguists in narrow rigorous sense focus on the linguistic features present in the given text and on analysis of their distribution and frequencies. But a poem, a novel, or an essay is more than a style – its style is just a part Any satisfactory stylistic analysis would be a combination of all the six approaches: Stylistics II

  17. Six approaches: 1)Style as an embellishment, 2)Style as choice between alternate expression, 3)Style as a set of individual characteristics, 4)style as deviations from a norm, 5)style as a set of collective characteristics, 6)Style as set of those relations among linguistic entities that are stable in terms of wider spans of text than the sentence Stylistics II

  18. A definition of style should have observational, explanatory and predictive adequacy. It should account for all choices – paradigmatic, grammatical, stylistics, should make inventory of style markers, stylistical natural markers, stylistic features, characteristics, should state the contextual spread of the style markers, Stylistics II

  19. Should account for over-lapping of stylistic sets (already established by study of other texts), shift of style or contextual transfer, should keep in mind distinction between style and dialect, should be able to study a text microstylistically and macrostylistically. Style is the aggregate of frequencies because it is the result of more than one linguistic item. Stylistics II

  20. For example, a given word in a text acquires stylistic significance by jextaposition with other words. Secondly, the study of style must not be restricted to phonological or morphological or lexical or syntactical observations: it must be built up of observations at various levels. Stylistics II

  21. Style is concerned with frequencies of linguistic items in a given context. To measure the style of the passage, frequencies of its linguistic items of different levels must be compared with the corresponding features in other text or corpus regarded as norm and having definite contextual relationship with this passage Stylistics II

  22. Example: For stylistic analysis of one of Pope’s poem, norms with varying contextual relationships include English eighteenth century poetry, the corpus of Pope’s work, all poems written in English in rhymed pentameter couplets, or, for greater contrast as well as comparison, the poetry of Wordsworth. Stylistics II

  23. Style is a link between context and linguistic form and the style of a text may be examined in relation to: 1. impressionistically recognized norms of language use 2. Text by other authors recognized by reference to one as comparable 3. Other text by the same author recognized by reference to 1 & 2 as comparable.

  24. This intra and extra textual study of the contextualization in the light of linguistic structure and its history that has come to be styled ‘stylistics’. The student of style must see language and literature in relation to other functions of language (socio-linguistics), in relation to other norms (statistic stylistics) Stylistics II

  25. in relation to the individual and collective characteristics inherent in the work, in the writer, in the age/period and in the literary tradition of the age. The stylistic selection should not mean ‘the choice between items that mean more or less the same’. Some classification of context is a pre-requisite for a sound stylistic analysis. Stylistics II

  26. All stylistic analysis is ultimately based on the matching of a text against a contextually related norm. Enkvist says, contextually bound linguistic items function as style markers. Style markers occurring in the same text form a stylistic set for that text. Stylistics II

  27. A stylistic set shared by a large number of contextually related text forms a major stylistic set occurring within a major contextual range. Texts sharing the same major stylistic set in the same major style Stylistics II

  28. Style as a set of individual or collected characteristics Almost all writers have their individual individuality Style as deviation from a norm It becomes evident that it is difficult to separate style from context. No way to know what an accepted norm is Summary

  29. Style as set of those relations among linguistic entities that are stable in terms of wider spans of text than the sentence. Even a single sentence possesses style and one cannot write a single sentence without style. Concept of spans not so much stylistic as grammatical Summary

  30. Style is the aggregate of frequencies because it is the result of more than one linguistic item. Any satisfactory stylistic analysis would be a combination of all the six approaches: All stylistic analysis is ultimately based on the matching of a text against a contextually related norm. Summary

More Related