LINGUIST List 19.3845
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Mon Dec 15 2008
Review: Historical Linguistics: Jucker & Taavitsainen (2008)
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1. Julie
Winter,
Speech Acts in the History of English
Message 1: Speech Acts in the History of English
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Date: 12-Dec-2008
From: Julie Winter <jmwinter76 yahoo.com>
Subject: Speech Acts in the History of English
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Announced at http://linguistlist.org/issues/19/19-1622.html EDITORS: Jucker, Andreas H.; Taavitsainen, Irma TITLE: Speech Acts in the History of English SERIES: Pragmatics and Beyond New Series 176 PUBLISHER: John Benjamins YEAR: 2008 Julie Winter, unaffiliated scholar SUMMARY This collection of eleven papers concerned with historical speech act analysis is divided into three sections: ''Directives and commissives,'' ''Expressives and assertives,'' and ''Methods of speech act retrieval.'' Eight of the articles were presented in earlier forms in 2006 at a conference in London of the European Society for the Study of English. The three papers that were not presented at the conference were nevertheless inspired by it. The authors of the papers in this volume used corpora or other empirical methods to collect speech act data from earlier stages of the English language, since historical pragmatics necessarily relies on written works for its data. While researchers of pragmatics in Present-day English can use judgments speakers make about the meaning of speech acts, there is no one still living who speaks an earlier version of the language to provide such information. The problem of establishing meaning in historical data is a leitmotiv for the entire volume. Jucker and Taavitsainen underscore this leitmotiv in the introduction with a quote by Bertuccelli Papi (2000, p. 64): ''We may climb a mountain with various types of equipment, and starting from any of its slopes, but we need be aware that they may be slippery and treacherous in various ways. And the history of language is a very difficult mountain to climb.'' The editors then offer a brief review of the work that has already been carried out in historical pragmatics and point to the need for more studies in this area. They also supply readers with definitions of critical terminology in the field, and they explain the importance of learning more about diachronic speech acts in linguistics in general. The editors furthermore emphasize the importance of using corpora searches, automated or manual, to collect data necessary for research in historical pragmatics. The various corpora, which contain millions of words, offer a plethora of examples of the speech acts in question in order to analyze them and reach conclusions about how they were used. The first group of papers deals with directives and commissives, or requests, commands, and promises. In his article ''Directives in Old English: Beyond politeness?'' Thomas Kohnen explores issues of politeness in directive interactions in Old English. While there are ways of softening directives in Present-day English (e.g. _Could you give me a hand?_ (p. 27)), Kohnen writes that similar examples are hard to find before the Early Modern period, and thus, such softening mechanisms may have developed later in the language. He examines four different formulations of directives in Old English in order to try to establish the role of politeness in the Anglo Saxon's choice of which speech act to use. He concludes that Anglo Saxons were much more direct when issuing commands and requests than are speakers of Present-day English, but that this directness did not mean that they were impolite by the standards of their society. Jonathan Culpeper and Dawn Archer also focus on the issue of politeness and directives in an earlier form of English in their paper ''Requests and directness in Early Modern English trial proceedings and play texts, 1640-1760.'' They examine requests in trial proceedings and play texts and then compare their results with other studies. They find that impositives (direct requests) predominate in their data, but similar to Kohnen, they do not believe this means that speakers of Early Modern English were impolite. Rather, ''the lack of distance associated with impositives, particularly imperatives, has neutral or even positive value'' (p. 77). In the third article of this section ''An inventory of directives in Shakespeare's _King Lear_'', Ulrich Busse is also interested in politeness issues in Early Modern English. He examines directive speech acts in Shakespeare's play _King Lear_ in order to learn more about these speech acts. King Lear is an ideal figure for such examination as his status changes so dramatically during the course of the play: ''He falls from powerful ruler to irrational, irate, and lunatic old man, and ends up as a most destitute human being'' (p. 85). Lear's choice of constructions would reflect his changes in ''social status, interpersonal relationships and emotional states of mind'' (pp. 85-86). Indeed Busse finds that Lear is not polite at first as he has no particular need to be but that later his directive speech acts show empathy toward others and reveal his understanding of true politeness. Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti continues the analysis of directives, but also adds the speech act of promising to her study: ''Two polite speech acts from a diachronic perspective: Aspects of the realisation of requesting and undertaking commitments in the nineteenth-century commercial community.'' She examines directives and commissives in a collection of business letters written in the nineteenth century; her aim is to pinpoint the specific strategies used by nineteenth century business letter writers when making requests and promises, and to establish how these strategies are related to our contemporary ideas of politeness. She finds that performative verbs are used often and that Searlian indirect strategies are not frequently used: ''We never encounter utterances with two illocutionary meanings such as the prototypical _It is cold in this room_ asserting something about room temperature and at the same time requesting that the window be closed'' (p. 128). The author also notes that modulation is the preferred way to request and make commitments in a polite manner. The final paper in this section by Mari Pakkala-Weckström deals exclusively with promises: '''No botmeles bihestes': Various ways of making binding promises in Middle English.'' The author conducted a manual search of works such as Chaucer's _Cantebury Tales_and _Troilus and Criseyde_ to inventory all possible ways of promising. She writes that honor and keeping promises were very important in chivalric literature of this period. Promises were so binding that they had to be kept even when they were not made seriously - when the promiser wasn't sincere or didn't know what the promise would involve. She points out that Searle's work on promises ''concentrates on the speaker and his/her intentions and sincerity, disregarding the other participants, i.e. the promisee and a possible audience. So, the perlocutionary effects of these specific speech acts are somewhat disregarded'' (p. 159). The second group of papers is concerned with expressives and assertives, or greetings, compliments and apologies. Joachim Grzega gathered numerous forms of greetings from various corpora in his article ''_Hal, Hail, Hello, Hi_: Greetings in English language history.'' He offers an inventory of all greetings throughout the history of English, and he examines where they came from and how they have changed. He discovers that there were very few greeting forms in Old English and an increase in forms in Middle English. Greetings are not only expressive, but can also be assertive in function. Finally, greetings tend to lose their original core meanings and become routinized formulae. '''Methinks you seem more beautiful than ever': Compliments and gender in the history of English'' by Irma Taavitsainen and Andrea H. Jucker explores the history of compliments in English and their connection to gender over time. The authors offer a detailed explanation of the contradictory nature of compliments that are face-enhancing as well as face-threatening acts. They point to studies of Present-day compliments that demonstrate that women tend to give more compliments than men, and that the subjects of the compliments are different for women and men. In their diachronic study of compliments the authors find that these observations hold true for earlier stages of the language. They also note that the primary function of compliments is to promote good relations between speaker and addressee, although they can also be used at times to demonstrate the speaker's power and authority. Jucker and Taavitsainen turn to apologies in the final paper of this section entitled ''Apologies in the history of English: Routinized and lexicalized expressions of responsibility and regret.'' They compare Present-day apologies to apologies in Renaissance English and find that those of today use relatively few formulae for expression while those of the earlier period are much more diverse in their formulation and are embedded in longer explanations. The types of offenses considered necessary for an apology are also different in the two periods. Finally, there has been the development of negative politeness in Present-day English away from the positive politeness of Renaissance English, which simply means that nowadays apologies are centered on the speaker, whereas they were earlier centered on the addressee. The final three papers are concerned with various technical aspects of automated retrieval of speech acts from corpora. The first article in this section ''Showing a little promise: Identifying and retrieving explicit illocutionary acts from a corpus of written prose'' by Petteri Valkonen focuses on the difficulty of accurately identifying speech acts with a concordance query. While some speech acts are routinely expressed with a fixed linguistic form, many are not, and thus it is difficult to retrieve them from a large body of data. The author employed a pattern-based retrieval program used in natural language processing to retrieve promises that are manifested by a previously identified limited set of performative verbs, but it was still necessary to check the results manually to ensure accuracy. While precision and recall were reasonably good, the author concludes that fully automated speech act retrieval is still ''an elusive goal'' (p. 270). Andreas Jucker, Gerold Schneider, Irma Taavitsainen, and Barb Breustedt discuss automatic retrieval of compliments from corpora in their paper ''Fishing for compliments: Precision and recall in corpus-linguistic compliment research.'' Compliments can be difficult to retrieve since they do not rely on easily identifiable performative speech act verbs. Therefore, the authors used lexical patterns to search for compliments; they discuss nine compliment patterns described by Manes and Wilson (1981), and convert these patterns into search strings in order to retrieve compliments from the _British National Corpus_ of Present-day English. Precision and recall problems meant that qualitative manual assessments had to be performed as well. These manual assessments involve interpreting meaning in speech acts, a highly subjective endeavor that greatly depends on context; thus, speech acts are ''fuzzy notions'' (p. 292). The final paper in this section by Thomas Kohnen ''Tracing directives through text and time: Towards a methodology of a corpus-based diachronic speech-act analysis'' takes a different approach toward automated speech act retrieval. Kohnen devised a ''bottom-up'' method to try to deal with the problems of precision and recall. He first selects a genre and a speech act and then carries out manual searches to compile a complete list of all manifestations of the speech act. Next, the procedure is repeated for other genres, making the list more complete. Finally, the manifestations are searched for in a larger corpus. The author finds that the genre-based bottom-up method yielded good results in that it gave a large number of manifestations of directives, and it demonstrated that some of the manifestations do not occur at all in certain genres. EVALUATION This is an excellent collection of papers in the field of diachronic speech act analysis that would appeal to anyone interested in the history of English, historical pragmatics, corpus linguistics, and the philosophy of language. All of the papers, which focus on intriguing problems and challenges in the field, are clearly written, and the authors carefully describe their goals and methodologies, and offer fascinating examples of speech acts they collected for their data. Their analyses of the data and the results are thorough and thoughtful. An additional strength of this book is that the introduction and each paper discuss earlier research in pragmatics and include extensive bibliographies for further exploration. The main caveat I offer is that this volume is not intended for the non-specialist reader. Aspects of the papers are quite technical, and most of the authors assume a fairly deep knowledge of pragmatics and familiarity with statistical analysis. Many of the authors use the early work in pragmatics carried out by Austin and Searle as their starting points, so it is necessary for readers to be acquainted with these writers. Nevertheless, due to the clear explanations and discussions, even a motivated novice can learn a great deal about historical pragmatics from this collection. As mentioned earlier, the editors, Jucker and Taavitsainen, provide helpful definitions for important concepts in pragmatics in the introduction; furthermore, in their papers they offer clear discussions of pragmatic concepts such as ''face-threatening acts,'' and ''illocutionary force.'' Thus, my main suggestion is that these papers should be placed at the beginning of each section as a means of introducing readers to some of the technical concepts used by all of the authors in their papers. A number of questions and problems that all the authors wrestle with are noteworthy. One has already been mentioned as the leitmotiv of the book, that is, ''How can we be certain of meaning when there is no one to ask?'' The authors believe that corpus linguistics will help solve this problem, yet fully automated, accurate searches are not yet available. This is a crucial problem because without the guarantee of accuracy, automated corpora with their numerous examples cannot be trusted, and researchers must manually check the results, a difficult endeavor with a large body of material. The papers in this volume demonstrate that researchers are well on their way towards improving automated searches, yet this brings me to another observation. Several of the authors note the subjective nature of interpreting meaning in earlier stages of the language (e.g. Jucker, et al, p. 292). This meaning is dependent on the context of the retrieved examples. Jucker, et al write: ''Context provides the clues for interpretation as meanings are negotiated. Both illocutions and perlocutions are important. Computerized searches are capable of locating illocutions but qualitative assessments are needed in pragmatic research to reveal local meanings of utterances'' (p. 292). In other words, determining meaning will always have this subjective element to it, and this seems to be something the authors struggle with since they are at pains to use strictly empirical methods. Yet another interesting question often brought up is the reliability of using fictional works by earlier authors for speech act retrieval. There is a lively debate in the field of pragmatics as to whether or not fiction accurately represents speech; yet the authors in this volume have relied on a great deal of fiction in their corpora, as transcripts of speech were not recorded. They offer strong reasons to justify this, but the question nevertheless underlies the works. An interesting contradiction appears in the introduction. In their discussion of why they favor empirical, corpus-based methods over the philosophical inquiry of Austin and Searle, Jucker and Taavitsainen argue that we should not assume that earlier speakers of English thought the way we do. They assert, ''While we may reach fairly reliable answers when we ask ourselves what it means to issue a command or make a promise, we cannot ask such questions about earlier stages of the language'' (p. 9). Yet the editors also claim that peoples from all ages and cultures are not that different (they invoke the Uniformitarian principle), and therefore, we are able to make assumptions about the meanings of the speech acts used in the history of English. In summary they assert that ''pragmatic meaning works uniformly over periods and societies'' (p. 4). Such a contradiction is not necessarily a problem or a flaw of the book. The fact that the authors all struggle with difficult questions of meaning in the history of the language only strengthens the papers offered in this collection. REFERENCES Austin, J. L. 1962. _How to Do Things With Words. The William James Lectures Delivered at Harvard University in 1955_. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Bertuccelli Papi, Marcella. 2000. Is a diachronic speech act theory possible? _Journal of Historical Pragmatics_ 1.1, 57-66. Manes, Joan, and Nessa Wolfson. 1981. The compliment formula. In: Florian Coulmas (ed.). _Conversational Routine. Explorations in Standardized Communication Situations and Pre-patterned Speech_. The Hague: Mouton, 115-132. Searle, John R. 1969. _Speech Acts. An Essay in the Philosophy of Language._ Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ABOUT THE REVIEWER Dr. Winter is a translator and an adjunct instructor in English and German. Her research interests lie in the following areas: the history of the English language, pragmatics, syntax, stylistics, and translation.
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