Course Project - stylistics

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SEUENG380Week04ChapterPPT_Simpsonunit03-2.pptx

Unit 3: Sections A and B: Grammar and style Sentence styles: development and illustration

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Section A: Grammar and style

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ENG 380: Stylistics

the grammar of a language = rules

grammatical rules of a language are the language as they stipulate the very bedrock of its syntactic construction.

intimidating area of analysis because it is not always easy to sort out which aspects of a text’s many interlocking patterns of grammar are stylistically salient.

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ENG 380: Stylistics

sentence (or clause complex)

Clause (most important)

phrase (or group)

word

morpheme

Grammar rank scale (hierarchy)

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Several important functions of language can be found in any clause:

tense

polarity

Mood (declarative, interrogative or imperative)

Core or nub (central idea/point)

The Clause

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ENG 380: Stylistics

It is a defining characteristic of clause structure that its four basic elements are typically realised by certain types of phrases.

Basic Clause Structure:

Subject (usually filled with a noun phrase)

Predicator (always filled with a verb phrase)

Complement (usually filled with a noun or adjective phrase)

Adjunct (usually filled with an adverb or prepositional phrase)

Clause Structure

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ENG 380: Stylistics

The woman feeds those pigeons regularly.

Our bull terrier was chasing the postman yesterday.

The Professor of Necromancy would wear lipstick every Friday.

The Aussie actress looked great in her latest film.

The man who came to dinner was pretty miserable throughout the evening.

Identify the elements of clause structure

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Method 1: Look for placement, and ask “wh-” questions.

Subject

Who/What?

In front of the verb

Finding the Complement:

Who/What?

After the verb

Finding the Adjunct:

How/When/Where/Why?

After the verb

Method 2: Add a ‘tag question’ to the declarative form of a clause.

Narrows the subject down to a single pronoun

Identifies auxiliary verbs, tense, etc.

Testing for Clause Constituents

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Mary’s curious contention that mackerel live in trees proved utterly

unjustified.

Form a tag question.

Example: tag question

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Coordination:

“My aunt and my uncle visit the farm regularly, don’t they?”

Two entities/people coordinated with “and”

Apposition:

“The winner, a local businesswoman, had donated the prize to charity, had she?”

Two phrases referencing the same entity/person (the winner, a local businesswoman)

Testing for Clause Constituents: An Example

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Variations in Interrogatives

Subject-Predicator Inversion

“Do” Insertion

Variations in Declaratives

Subject-Predicator only

Double Complements (direct object and indirect object)

Any number of Adjuncts

Mary awoke suddenly in her hotel room one morning because of a knock on the door.

Clause Structure Variation

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Ellipsis

Predicator is eliminated in context because of a previous reference

This is called a ‘minor clause’

A: “Where are the keys?”

B: “In your pocket!”

they form an important locus (place) for stylistic experimentation.

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Section B: Sentence styles: development and illustration

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Consists of one clause

Stylistic use:

Frenetic/Urgent

Fast-paced

The Simple Sentence

He ate his supper.

He went to bed.

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ENG 380: Stylistics

“I tried to examine myself. I felt my pulse. I could not at first feel any pulse at all. Then, all of a sudden, it seemed to start off. I pulled out my watch and timed it. I made it a hundred and forty-seven to the minute. I tried to feel my heart. I could not feel my heart. It had stopped beating.” Three Men in a Boat

Style description and its effect:

Most sentences are made of single independent clause. This style gives a sense of speed and urgency which helps to show the anxiety of the character as he examines himself.

Example

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Consists of two or more independent clauses

Coordination shows equal status

Coordinating conjunctions

And (direct coordinator)

But (adversive coordinator)

Or

So

For

yet

Stylistic use:

Symmetry, connection

Popular in junior readers and nursery rhymes

The Compound Sentence

He ate his supper

he went to bed.

and

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Consists of one independent clause and two or more subordinate clauses

Asymmetrical/subordinating relationship

Subordinating conjunctions

When

Although

If

Because

Since

The Complex Sentence (Type 1): subordination

When he had eaten his supper,

he went to bed.

although he had just eaten his supper.

He went to bed

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Consists of one main clause and one embedded (downranked) clause

Embedded Relationship

The Complex Sentence (Type 2): embedding

She announced that

he had gone to bed.

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Equivalent constituents

Adjuncts and/or subordinate clauses placed both before and after the Subject/Predicator

“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow, Creeps in this petty pace from day to day” (Macbeth, V.v.19–20).

Trailing constituents

Adjuncts and/or subordinate clauses placed after the Subject/Predicator

“You walked with me among water mint And bog myrtle when I was tongue-tied” (Longley 1995).

Anticipatory constituents

Adjuncts and/or subordinate clauses placed before the Subject/Predicator

“On my right hand there were lines of fishing-stakes resembling a mysterious system of half submerged fences” (Conrad 1995 [1912]: 1).

Constituent Types

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Un-elaboration of the noun “fog”: undifferentiated, undetermined.

Restricted verbal development in main clauses. one key element is omitted (finite) which provides tense, polarity and person. On going process.

Trailing constituents. subordinate clauses and Adjuncts of location. It refers to the fog? Or to the river? Indeterminacy.

Gradual narrowing of spatial focus

Internal foregrounding: by creating a different Subject element and by shifting the lexical item ‘fog’ to the right of the Predicator in the sixth sentence.

Stylistics features of Charles Dickens’s novel Bleak House

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Style comes from the totality of interrelated elements of language

rather than from individual features in isolation.

Summary

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ENG 380: Stylistics

Simpson, P. (2004). Stylistics: A Resource Book for Students (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415644969 (print edition).

References

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ENG 380: Stylistics