прагматика и медиа дискурс / Teun A van Dijk - Text and Context
.pdfLONGMAN LINGUISTICS LIBRARY
TEXT AND CONTEXT
EXPLORATIONS IN THE SEMANTICS AND PRAGMATICS OF DISCOURSE
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Text and Context
Explorations in the semantics and pragmatics of discourse
Teun A. van Dijk
University of Amsterdam
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LONGMAN
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Longman Group UK Limited
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Published in the United States of America by Longman Inc., New York
© Longman Group Ltd 1977
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Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London W1P 9HE.
First published 1977
First published in paperback 1980
Sixth impression 1992
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Dijk, Teun Adrianus van
Text and context.-(Longman linguistics Library; no. 21)
1.Discourse analysis
1.Title
415P302 79-41280
ISBN -582-29105-4
Produced by Longman Singapore Publishers Pte Ltd
Printed in Singpaore
for Doro
Preface
One of the major recent developments in linguistics and its neighbouring disciplines is the increasing attention being paid to the relevance of various kinds of CONTEXT. Renewed attempts are made in sociolinguistics and the social sciences to define the systematic relationships between social and cultural contexts and the structures and functions of language. In particular, philosophy of language has shown the linguist how pragmatic context constitutes the conditions determining the appropriateness of natural language utterances taken as speech acts.
Similarly, more emphasis is being given to the fact that utterances of natural language may be theoretically reconstructed as sequences of sentences, in which morpho-phonological, syntactic and semantic properties of a sentence are accounted for in relation to those of other sentences of the sequence. Besides this recognition of its role of `verbal context', eg in the explication of such notions as coherence, the sequence is also being studied in its own right, viz as DISCOURSE. Some of the properties of discourse have received attention from a proper linguistic point of view, eg in the framework of so-called TEXT GRAMMARS, whereas other specific structures of discourse and discourse processing are now being investigated in cognitive psychology, anthropology, sociology, philosophy and poetics.
This book is intended as a contribution to the more specific linguistic study of discourse. It summarizes and further elaborates part of the investigations I have been undertaking lince the publication of my dissertation
in 1972. I am acutely aware of the weaknesses of that book. The present study therefore aims at providing some corrections by establishing a more explicit and more systematic approach to the linguistic study of discourse. Yet, the nature of this book is more modest. Instead of devising a large programmatic framework, I have preferred to do exploratory
viii
PREFACE
research on some more specific, but fundamental, topics of a theory of discourse, viz on such notions as
DISCOURSE, and THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE SEMANTICS AND PRAGMATICS OF
DISCOURSE, which have received too little attention in recent (text) grammatical research. Furthermore, no particular claims are made for the format of a possible grammar of discourse; nor do I attempt a critique of other proposais made on the issues treated in this book. Topics such as quantification, pronominalization, presupposition, etc, which have been extensively studied both in sentence grammars and text grammars in the last few years, have been ignored in this book in favour of an inquiry into other basic problems of semantics and pragmatics. One of these problems for instance is that regarding the relationship between COMPOSITE SENTENCES on the one hand
and SEQUENCES OF SENTENCES on the other hand.
It turns out that such an investigation cannot be made without appeal to a sound PRAGMATIC THEORY, because a characterization of discourse in terms of sequences of sentences simultaneously requires an account of conditions on sequences of speech acts.
Although it will be claimed that, both at the semantic and the pragmatic levels, MACRO-STRUCTURES of discourse and conversation should be postulated, especially in order to account for the notion of TOPIC OF DISCOURSE used to define linear connection and coherence in composite sentences and sequences, this book will pay only limited attention to macro-structures, for which separate treatment in terms of cognitive processes and of other theories, eg of narrative structures, is necessary.
As already mentioned, my observations are not being made within the framework of a specific type of grammar: rather, my theoretical tools are borrowed from certain domains of philosophy, philosophical logic, cognitive psychology and artificial intelligence. This is not without methodological problems, but these have had to be passed over without thorough discussion here. One of these problems concerns the nature of the notion of interpretation as defined respectively by a FORMAL SEMANTICS and COGNITIVE SEMANTICS. Thus, the assignment of semantic structures to discourse is based both on abstract 'logical' conditions and on conditions defined in terms of conventional world knowledge, and it is not easy to determine a priori which of these should be made explicit in a more specific linguistic semantics of discourse.
Similar remarks should be made on the precise status of a pragmatic theory with respect to a grammar, in a strict sense, on the one hand, and the philosophy and logic of action and the theory of social interaction on the other hand. More than ever, the linguist finds hirnself at the crossroads of several disciplines, and a more or less arbitrary restriction on the domain and problems of linguistic theory would not be fruitful at the moment for the development of new approaches to the study of natural language.
The organization of this book is straightforward and will be explained in the