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INTRODUCTION TO STYLISTICIS

THE SUBJECT AND MAIN


OBJECTIVES OF STYLITICS
ROOTS AND PREDECESSORS
• Ancient time: Rhetoric - the art of creating speeches and
Poetics (process of artistic creation)
• Aristotle “Poetics” 320 B.C. – epic drama and lyrics,
• Socrates - Dialectics ( the art of creating a dialogue)
Poetics developed into Literary Criticism; Rhetoric and
Dialectics – into Stylistics
In ancient Rome:
CAESAR and analogists CICERO and anomalists

•Stressed regularity and system •Aimed at creation of flowery language


rules •Used unnatural syntactic patterns,
•Focused on facts and data artificial sentence structures
•Their aim was to create simple •Created anomalies on all language
clear and straightforward levels
speeches •Their true message was secondary to
•Seneca and Tacituts the form of presentation
MIDDLE AGES AND THE NEW AGE
• Anomalistic rhetoric of Cicero (aesthetically attractive)
became a model way of public speaking
• Influence of ancient India – brevity of speech
• Distinction between FORM and CONTENT
• The language of science, culture, administration (Latin)
was different from the language of common people
• Romanticism: style referred to written form of language
Nicolas Boileau L’Art poetique (1674) language and parole
• 1. stylus altus (works of art)
• 2. stylus mediocris (the style of high society)
• 3. stylus humilis (the style of low society and comedies)
19 century W.von Humboldt “ Uber die Verschiedenheit des
menschlichen Sprachbaues..” functional styles
Prague Linguistic Circle (1926)
PLAN
1. The Object, Objectives and Units of Stylistics, its
Methodological Basis. Structural and Functional
Approaches.
2. Stylistics and Other Sciences. Theory of Information.
Major Scholars and Landmarks of Stylistics Development
as a Science.
3. The Main Terms, Categories and Notions of Stylistics.
4. Expressive Means and Stylistic Devices. Expressiveness
and Emotiveness.
5. Types of Meaning. Meaning and Sense. Meaning from a
Stylistic Point of View
6. Functional styles and varieties of a language
LITERATURE
1. Алексеев А.Я. Сопоставительная стилістика.
– Д.: НГУ, 2012
2.Galperin I.R. Stylistics.- M.: Higher School,
1977, p.1
3.Мороховский А.Н. Стилистика английского
языка.-Киев: Вища школа,1991
4.Арнольд И.В. Стилистика современного
английского языка.- М.: Просвещение, 1990
5.Дубенко О. Ю. Порівняльна стилістика
англійської та української мов. – Вінниця:
Нова книга, 2005
6.Єфімов Л.П. Стилістика англійської мови. –
Вінниця: Нова книга, 2004
Stylistics – is a branch of general linguistics.
2 objectives
• Investigation of special language media which secure the
desirable effect of the utterance – they are called
stylistic devices(SD) and expressive
means(EM). Stylistics studies the nature, functions
and structure of SDs and EMs

• The second field of investigation is concerned with certain


types of texts which due to the choice and arrangement of
language means are distinguished by the pragmatic aspect
of communication. These types are called functional
styles of language.
DEFINITION
stylistics - is a science, a branch of linguistics,
investigating principles and the results of
selection and use of lexical, grammatical,
phonetic and other language means for the
transfer of thoughts and emotions under di
Lat - stylus - a stick made of material for
writing.
Stylistics - from French " Stylistique " -
instrument for Writing.fferent
circumstances of communication
Landmarks

1. The first discussion on the problems of style


“Issues of linguistics” in 1954
2.Conference on Style - Indiana University , 1958
publication of its materials in 1960 under the
editorship of Thomas Sebeok
3. Conference on Style , Moscow State Pedagogical
Institute of Foreign Languages in 1969
4. Symposium , Italy , Proceedings under the
editorship of Prof. Chatman in 1971.
5. American journals , Illinois University “Style” and
“Language and Style”.
XX century
• Germany New Idealists: B.Croce, K.Vossler etc.
developed individualistic and psychoanalytical
approach to language
• French School of Charles Bally and F. de Saussure
(Geneva) – expressive stylistics
STRUCTURALISM
• The Prague Linguistic Circle – Jakobson,
Trubetskoi, Mathesius and Copenhagen
Structuralistic school – Hjelmslev, in the US – Sapir
and Blooomfield
• 1920s Russia FORMALISM – the focus of the text
analysis was on the form (HOW) not content
(WHAT) Roman Jakobson, Tynianov and
Vinogradov
Main representatives
Michael Riffatere - theory of information:
Denotative and Connotative Meaning
Decoding stylistics - I.V.Arnold
Zhirmunsky(1921), Vinogradov (1923),
Tynianov (1924) - literary trend of
formalism
Galperin, Lotman, Kukharenko, Morokhovsky
Darbyshire 1971 “A Grammar of Style”
Enkvist “Linguistic Stylistics” 1973
Main Terms, Categories and Notions
STYLE
• The correspondence between thought and language
expression
• An individual manner of making use of language
• The set of rules how to write a composition
• The aesthetic function of language
• Expressive means in language
• Synonymous ways of rendering one and the same idea
• Emotional coloring in language
• A system of special devices called stylistic devices
• The splitting of the literary language into separate systems
called styles
• The individual manner of an author in making use of
language
STYLE
• “style is the man himself “(Buffon 18thc.)
• “Style is depth” Darbyshire
• “style is deviation” Enkvist
• “style is the result of an author’s success in compelling
language to conform to his mode of experience (Middleton
Murry)
• “Style is a contextually restricted linguistic variation”
(Enkvist)
• Style is a selection of non-distinctive features of
language(Bloomfield)
• Style is simply synonymous with form or
expression(Benedetto Croce)
• “structures, sequences and patterns which extend beyond
the boundaries of individual sentences - style (Archibald
Hill )
Individual style and idiolect
Individual style implies the peculiarities of a writer’s
individual manner of using language means to achieve the
effect he desires: components of individual style -
• composition of phrasal units
• rhythm and melody of utterances
• system of imagery
• preference for definite stylistic devices and their
correlation with neutral language media
• interdependence of the language means employed by the
author and those characteristic to his personages.
The speech of any individual, which is characterized by
particular elements, is called an idiolect that reveals his
breeding and education
"A VERY SHORT STORY” by Ernest Hemingway
• One hot evening in Padua they carried him up onto the
roof and he could look out over the top of the town. There
were chimney swifts in the sky. After a while it got dark and
the searchlights came out. The others went down and took
the bottles with them. He and Luz could hear them below
on the balcony. Luz sat on the bed. She was cool and fresh
in the hot night….
• She loved him as always, but she realized now it was only a
boy and girl love. She hoped he would have a great career,
and believed in him absolutely. She knew it was for the
best. The major did not marry her in the spring, or any
other time. Luz never got an answer to the letter to Chicago
about it. A short time after he contracted gonorrhea from a
sales girl in a loop department store while riding in a
taxicab through Lincoln Park.
James Joyce “Ulysses”
INELUCTABLE MODALITY OF THE VISIBLE: AT LEAST THAT IF NO MORE,
thought through my eyes. Signatures of all things I am here to read, seaspawn
and seawrack, the nearing tide, that rusty boot. Snotgreen, bluesilver, rust:
coloured signs. Limits of the diaphane. But he adds: in bodies. Then he was
aware of them bodies before of them coloured. How? By knocking his sconce
against them, sure. Go easy. Bald he was and a millionaire, maestro di color
che sanno. Limit of the diaphane in. Why in? Diaphane, adiaphane. If you can
put your five fingers through it, it is a gate, if not a door. Shut your eyes and see.
Stephen closed his eyes to hear his boots crush crackling wrack and
shells. You are walking through it howsomever. I am, a stride at a time. A
very short space of time through very short times of space. Five, six: the
nacheinander. Exactly: and that is the ineluctable modality of the audible.
Open your eyes. No. Jesus! If I fell over a cliff that beetles o'er his
base, fell through the nebeneinander ineluctably. I am getting on nicely in
the dark. My ash sword hangs at my side. Tap with it: they do. My two feet
in his boots are at the end of his legs, nebeneinander. Sounds solid: made
by the mallet of Los Demiurgos. Am I walking into eternity along Sandymount
strand? Crush, crack, crick, crick.
NORM, expressiveness and emotiveness
Norm – is an invariant, which should embrace all variable
phonemic, morphological, lexical, and syntactic patterns
with their typical properties circulating in the language at a
definite period of time.
language-as-a-system and language-in-action, language and
speech (discourse), lange and parole.
Expressiveness – in etymological sense is a kind of
intensification of the utterance (or a part of it).
Emotiveness - reveals emotions of the writer or a speaker by
not directly manifesting their emotions but by echoing real
feelings, designed to awaken co-experience on the part of
the reader
Emotional synonyms
• BIG – enormous, huge, large, gigantic, great, immense,
monstrous, macroscopic, mammoth, tremendous
• SMALL – little, tiny, minute, miniature, miniscule,
undersized, diminutive, lilliputian, midget, petite
• BEAUTIFUL - fair, fine, good-looking, handsome, splendid,
gorgeous, lovely, picturesque, pretty, scenic, stunning
• UGLY – disfigured, evil-looking, grotesque, monstrous,
hideous, repulsive, unsightly
• INTERESTING - absorbing, engrossing, fascinating,
gripping, riveting, entertaining, amusing, intriguing
• BORING - boring, deadening, dull, irksome, slow, tedious,
tiresome, wearisome, uninteresting
Expressiveness vs emotiveness
Expressive means
Expressive means are those phonetic, morphological, word-
building, lexical, phraseological, syntactical forms, which
exist in language-as-a-system for the purpose of logical or
emotional intensification of the utterance.
Phonetic EM - pitch, melody, stress, pausation, drawling out,
whispering and sing-song manner
Morphological EM - number, Historical Present, “shall” in
the 2 or 3 person, demonstrative pronouns, verbals
Lexical EM - different affixes: e.g. diminutive suffixes –
dearie, sonny, auntie, streamlet. At the lexical level
expressiveness can also be rendered by the words
possessing inner expressive charge - interjections,
epithets, slang and vulgar, poetic or archaic words, set
phrases, idioms, catchwords, proverbs and sayings
If you can keep your head when all about If you can make one heap of all your
you winnings
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you; And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
If you can trust yourself when all men And lose, and start again at your
doubt you, beginnings,
But make allowance for their doubting And never breathe a word about your
too: loss:
If you can wait and not be tired by If you can force your heart and nerve and
waiting, sinew
Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies, To serve your turn long after they are
Or being hated don't give way to hating, gone,
And yet don't look too good, nor talk too And so hold on when there is nothing in
wise; you
If you can dream - and not make dreams Except the Will which says to them:
your master; "Hold on!“
If you can think - and not make thoughts If you can talk with crowds and keep
your aim, your virtue,
If you can meet with Triumph and Or walk with Kings - nor lose the
Disaster common touch,
And treat those two impostors just the If neither foes nor loving friends can
same: hurt you,
If you can bear to hear the truth you've If all men count with you, but none too
spoken much:
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for If you can fill the unforgiving minute
fools, With sixty seconds' worth of distance
Harvey Keitel recites “IF” by R.Kipling
Stylistic devices
Stylistic device is a conscious and intentional
intensification of some typical structural and/or
semantic property of a language unit (neutral or
expressive) promoted to a generalized status thus
becoming a generative model.
SDs display an application of 2 meanings: the ordinary one
(already established in language-as-a-system) and a
special – imposed on the unit by the author (or content),
a meaning, which appears in language-in-action
Stylistic devices (tropes, figures of speech) unlike expressive means are
not language phenomena. They are formed in speech and most of
them do not exist out of context. According to principles of their
formation, stylistic devices are grouped into phonetic, lexico-
semantic and syntactic types. Stylistic devices are the result of
revaluation of neutral words, word-combinations and syntactic
structures. Stylistic devices are studied by stylistic semasiology.
Types of context

Linguistic context is the encirclement of a language unit by


other language units in speech. Such encirclement makes
the meaning of the unit clear and unambiguous. It is
especially important in case with polysemantic words.
Microcontext is the context of a single utterance
(sentence). Macrocontext is the context of a paragraph in a
text. Megacontext is the context of a book chapter, a story
or the whole book.

An extralingual (situational) context is formed by


extralingual conditions in which communication takes
place : physical context and abstract context. Temporal or
chronological context , psychological context
Linguistic micro context
Extralinguistic context
Speech and writing (oral and written language varieties)
Speech is normally a Writing is the use of visual
continuous stream of sound. symbols which act as a
Conversations are often code for communication
accompanied by other sign between individuals or
systems which aid groups. The code of written
understanding. These might language consists of letter-
be physical gestures, facial forms (the alphabet) used
expressions, even bodily to form a visual image of
posture. Meaning in speech is spoken words. Words are
commonly conveyed by tone formed in accordance with
and other non-verbal means the conventions of
such as irony. Speech quite spelling, then combined
commonly includes false according to the rules of
starts, repetition, hesitation syntax to form meaningful
statements.
Types of Meaning
primary (denotative) meaning and additional (connotative)
meaning/ objective and emotive planes
Connotative meaning may be of 4 types:
1.functional (reflecting the sphere of usage of the word) –
formal/informal – dear Sir/ Hey, dude
2.evaluative (positive, negative or neutral) –
ambitious/pushy/goal-oriented
3.emotive (rendering the attitude of the speaker) – It’s
fabulous! Disgusting! Oh boy! Tut tut!
4.expressive (containing an image of pragmatic value) – to
express what is really meant
stylistic meaning as distinguished from lexical one, which is
representing primary information, is based on the
secondary (additional) information.
Types of Meaning
Lexical meaning is given explicitly while stylistic meaning is
always implied. Lexical meaning is relatively stable, and
stylistic meaning is liable to change
Grammatical meaning reflects the relations between words or
some forms of words or constructions, it can also be called
structural meaning. All the words have grammatical
meaning simply because they belong to some language and
have their place in it
Logical, emotive and nominal meaning
Logical meaning (synonymously called referential or direct) is
the precise naming of a feature, an idea, a phenomenon or
an object. There can be primary and secondary logical
meanings. All the meanings fixed by the dictionaries
comprise what is called the semantic structure of a word
Types of Meaning
Emotive meaning also materializes the concept of a word but
it has reference to the feelings and emotions of a speaker
towards the thing. It names the object by evaluating it.
Usually we deal with contextual emotive meaning. But some
classes of words – interjections, exclamations, and
swearwords – are direct carriers of emotive meaning.
Interjections have even lost completely their logical
meaning: e.g. alas, oh, ah, pooh, darn, gosh.
Nominal meaning steps in when we deal with the words
serving the purpose of singling out one definite and
singular object of a whole class of similar objects. These
words are classified by grammarians as proper nouns as
different from common nouns
Functional styles of language
The object of linguostylistics as the study of the nature,
functions and structure of SDs and EMs and the study of the
functional styles of language.
Functional style (FS) may be defined as a system of
interrelated language means which serves a definite aim of
communication
FSs are sometimes called registers or discourses:
• the language of belles-lettres
• the language of publicistic literature
• the language of press/media
• the language of scientific prose
• the language of official documents
I.V. Arnold mentions four styles: poetic style, scientific style,
newspaper style, colloquial style.
Linguistic stylistics and literary stylistics
The old man is dead. Старик умер.
The gentleman well advanced in years attained the
termination of his terrestrial existence. Старец скончался
The ole bean kicked the bucket. Старый хрыч подох

Linguistic stylistics and literary stylistics are two separate and


at the same time interconnected branches of stylistics
Linguistic stylistics studies functional styles of a language
and the elements of language from the point of view of
their ability to express and cause emotions
Literary stylistics studies expressive means and stylistic
devices characteristic for a definite work of art, man of
letter, literary movement, trend or epoch, and factors
influencing the expressiveness of language.
Structure of Stylistics
Phoneme Stylistic phonetics
Morpheme Stylistic morphology
Lexeme Stylistic lexicology
Sentence Stylistic syntax
Paragraph
Text
Connection of stylistics with other branches of linguistics
Stylistics and phonetics: Phonetics studies sounds, articulation,
rhythmics and intonation. Stylistics concentrates on expressive sound
combinations, intonational and rhythmic patterns. Stylistics and
lexicology: Lexicology describes words, their origin, development,
semantic and structural features. Stylistics also deals with words, but
only those which are expressive in language or in speech. Stylistics and
grammar: Grammar describes regularities of building words, word-
combinations, sentences and texts. Stylistics restricts itself to those
grammar regularities, which make language units expressive.

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