Stylistics
Stylistics
Stylistics
DEFINITION:
Stylistics is a branch of applied linguistics concerned with the study of style in texts, especially (but not
exclusively) in literary works. Also called literary linguistics. A person who specializes in stylistic analysis
is called a stylistician.
According to Katie Wales in A Dictionary of Stylistics, 2nd ed. (Pearson, 2001), "The goal of most stylistics
is not simply to describe the formal features of texts for their own sake, but in order to show their
functional significance for the interpretation of the text; or in order to relate literary effects to linguistic
'causes' where these are felt to be relevant."
There are various overlapping subdisciplines of stylistics, including literary stylistics, interpretive
stylistics, evaluative stylistics, corpus stylistics, discourse stylistics, feminist stylistics, computational
stylistics, and cognitive stylistics.
"A stylistician can arguably be viewed as a person who with his/her detailed knowledge of the workings
of morphology, phonology, lexis, syntax, semantics, and various discourse and pragmatic models, goes
in search of language-based evidence in order to support or indeed challenge the subjective
interpretations and evaluations of various critics and cultural commentators. Imagine a kind of Sherlock
Holmes character who is an expert grammarian and rhetorician and has a love of literature and other
creative texts."
(Michael Burke, The Routledge Handbook of Stylistics. Routledge, 2014)
Computer-Based Stylistics
"Stylistics, traditionally known as the study of literary texts using formal linguistic tools, can also be done
via sophisticated computer-based applications. Some stylisticians quantitatively analyse large amounts
of data and texts, not possible otherwise, and thus can provide answers to questions such as what is
Dickens' writing style in his novels or how can one state, solely on the basis of textual evidence, that
Milton or Shakespeare's works are historically arranged?"
(Saumya Sharma, “Language Wise.” The Times of India, July 8, 2013)
"Stylistic analysis attempts to provide a commentary which is objective and scientific, based on concrete
quantifiable data, and applied in a systematic way. . . . The specific differences between conventional
close reading and stylistics include the following:
Close reading emphasizes differences between literary language and that of the general speech
community . . .. Stylistics, by contrast, emphasizes connections between literary language and everyday
language. . . .
Stylistics uses specialized technical terms and concepts which derive from the science of linguistics,
terms like 'transitivity,' 'under-lexicalisation,' 'collocation,' and 'cohesion' . . ..
Stylistics makes greater claims to scientific objectivity than does close reading, stressing that its methods
and procedures can be learned and applied by all. Hence, its aim is partly the 'demystification' of both
literature and criticism."
(Peter Barry, Beginning Theory, 2nd ed. Manchester University Press, 2002)
Cognitive Stylistics
"Cognitive stylistics combines the kind of explicit, rigorous and detailed linguistic analysis of literary texts
that is typical of the stylistics tradition with a systematic and theoretically informed consideration of the
cognitive structures and processes that underlie the production and reception of language. . . .
"What is new about cognitive stylistics is the way in which linguistic analysis is systematically based on
theories that relate linguistic choices to cognitive structures and processes. This provides more
systematic and explicit accounts of the relationship between texts on the one hand and responses and
interpretations on the other."
(Elena Semino and Jonathan Culpeper, Foreword to Cognitive Stylistics: Language and Cognition in Text
Analysis. John Benjamins, 2002)