Lecture 1 Phonetics as a Linguistic Science Plan


The Origin and Present-day Status of Phonostylistics



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2. The Origin and Present-day Status of Phonostylistics

The branch of linguistics, which focuses on the study of styles, is called stylistics. The word stylistics was first registered in English dictionaries in 1882. It meant 'the science of literary style; the study of stylistic features'.

Modern stylistics was elaborated at the end of the 19th century - the beginning of the 20th century. It has inherited much from ancient rhetoric, the art of public speaking and writing that appeared in the 5th century BC. Rhetoric dealt with the choice of words in sentences and their detailed or-ganization (elocutio). Modern stylistics is reconsidering, from a different perspective, the problems that formerly constituted the object of rhetoric.

Stylistics further splits into a number of interrelated disciplines that in-vestigate style from different angles. The subject-matter of phonetic styli-stics (or phonostylistics) is versatile and not clearly determined. It studies variation in the use of sounds of a language, its phonetic expressive inventory, as well as typical prosodic features of different types of discourses and registers. No unanimous approach to the study of styles and stylistic variation has been elaborated yet. In its broadest sense, phonostylistics deals with "style-sensitive" or "style-dependent" phonological processes, i.e. conditioned by style. The three major aspects of the study of styles: quantitative, qualitative, and functional. Discrete styles are present in some languages, which impose co-occurrence restrictions on forms within a given style.

Stylistic variation can also be caused by such factors as 1) topic, 2) setting, and 3) relationship between interlocutors.

Stylistic variation is often analysed as a linear continuum, according to the parameter of formality: due to the degree of attention given to speech by speakers, speech is classified from very casual to very careful (Labov 1974). A scale of styles is generally encompassed within the extremes of emphatic vs. informal, with formal in between. Emphatic style is well-exemplified by citation forms, informal styles include casual, colloquial, intimate words, while a speech, a lecture, or a job interview are examples of a formal style.

Casual speech is the most common and the most natural register speakers use. There exists the whole array of terms to label this type of speech: fast, rapid, allegro, connected, informal, real, spontaneous, or conversational. The primary style-differentiating criteria are tempo of speech and attention paid to speech. The relationship between the two criteria is inversely proportional: the higher the degree of attention, the slower the tempo.

Phonostylistic processes are language-specific. The same function is served by various means across languages, but also within a language.

Some new ideas and developments have been born (or at least grow very fast) in the last decades: face, politeness, accommodation and prototypes. Some research areas have expanded enormously: sex differences of all kinds, stylistic variables, and relationship between language and thought (Hudson 1996).

There is also an increasing study of the phonostylistic and pedagogic issues raised by the role of English as an international language, and by the worldwide teaching of non-native literatures in English. The main effect of

such developments has been a

displacement of the canon of Eurocentric and American texts by material such as popular fiction, writing by women, texts from different national literatures, and a wider range of spoken and written material. The role of style in such texts compels the study of the ideological determinants both on the texts and on the position of the reader/interpreter. Consideration of such sociolinguistic and sociocultural factors is facilitated by the developments in linguistic/stylistic/phonostylis-tic description moving away from extracts and from short, "deviant" lyric poems toward a study of larger units like discourse, genre and narrative as socially signifying practices.

The focus of the field of applied stylistics is the study of contextually distinctive varieties of language, with particular reference to style as a linguistic phenomenon of literary and non-literary texts. In the 1980s, strong influences have come from developments in linguistics in the fields of pragmatics and discourse analysis. Such influences have reinforced descriptions of style as predominantly suprasentential textual phenomenon, and have broadened the base for the applications of stylistics and phonostylistics.


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