This book aims to provide a new, linguistically grounded typology of
speech and thought representation in English on the basis of the
systematic study of deictic, syntactic and semantic properties of
authentic examples drawn from literary as well as non-literary
sources. In the area beyond direct and indirect speech or thought,
‘free indirect discourse’ has often been implicitly treated as a
residual category that can accommodate anything that is neither one
nor the other. This book takes a fresh look at the evidence in the
area of deixis, particularly through a close study of pronoun and
proper name use, and proposes to distinguish the more
character-oriented free indirect type from a narrator-oriented
‘distancing’ indirect type, which is grammatically wholly
structured from the narrator’s deictic standpoint. Unlike free
indirect representations, which coherently represent the character’s
viewpoint, the distancing indirect type sees narrators appropriating
character discourse for their own purposes, which may for instance be
ironic. The distinctions thus drawn shed new light on the much debated
‘dual voice’ approach to free indirect discourse. Included in the
scope of this book are subjectified uses of clauses such as I think,
which no longer primarily construe a cognition process, but rather
come to function as hedges. Such speaker-encoding uses are argued to
involve an interpersonal type of structure, not based on
complementation, whereas the non-subjectified cases receive an
interclausal complementation analysis which does not have recourse to
the problematic notion of ‘reporting verb’. This monograph is
mainly of interest to researchers and graduate students interested in
the syntax, semantics, and pragmatics of reported speech viewed from a
constructional perspective.
Les mer
A Cognitive-Functional Approach
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110215373
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
De Gruyter Mouton
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter