Discourse Analysis (B)
Discourse Analysis (B)
Discourse Analysis (B)
CONTEXTUAL PHENOMENA
SURYA ANDI NUGRAHA (121511223008)
TYA RIZKA RACHMANIA (121611223023)
FEBRIAN FALENTINO FREDRIKTHO
(121411231017)
ALTHAFFINA CAHYANI (121411231060)
7.1 DEIXIS
I am now standing on the
Inspired by Karl Buhler
roof
Derived from Greek word “to show” ; “to
indicate”
• I the person uttering the
Used to denote elements in a language
which refer directly to the discourse situation sentence
Neutral order
I asked her to marry me in the middle of an autumn storm
Topicalization
In the middle of an autumn storm I asked her to marry me
Cleft construction
It was in the middle of an autumn storm that I asked her to marry me
A. Indefinite/definite expressions
Indefinite expressions mark the first mention of a referent, i.e. the
introduction of new referents which are not known to the
listener/reader. Definite expressions enable individuals to be identified
by listeners.
2. Proper Name
e.g. Calcutta, Hercules world knowledge
7.5 Presuppositions
• Examples were given in 7.4 that indicate that listeners and readers can
sometimes infer information from the discourse. In fact, this is a more general
characteristic of discourse: more can be derived from discourse than is
explicitly stated. For example: It took John seven years to complete his
studies.
• The following information can be derived from this sentence.
a. There is a person named John.
b. John was a student.
c. John was not a brilliant student.
• The information that there is an individual named John is not stated explicitly
in (36), but can be derived from the fact that a person is mentioned who is
called by that name.
• The fact that John was a student is likewise not stated explicitly, but this can
be derived from the statement that he took seven years to finish his studies.
• Depending on the concrete situation, more information could be derived.
Sentence (36) could contain (36c) as implicit information if it had just been
stated that the program John was in usually takes four years to complete.
Presuppositions
A special type of implicit information is called presupposition, meaning "to
assume beforehand': a term which originated in the philosophy of logic.
Information which is explicitly stated is referred to as a claim or an assertion.
The example in the previous slide makes it clear that all kinds of information
can be derived from a sentence.
The term presupposition is reserved for the implicit information which must be
true for the sentence in question to be itself true or false.
A sentence such as "I have stopped smoking" can only be true or false if the
person saying it in fact used to smoke. The presupposition of this sentence is
thus "I used to smoke“.
Put another way: a presupposition is the only type of information that is
unaffected by denial of the original sentence.
Examples:
(37) John is (not) opening the window.
a. The window is closed.
(38) Democracy must (not) be restored in Surinam.
a. Surinam was once a democracy.
Presuppositions
The a-sentences given here are presuppositions because they are also true
if (37) and (38) are denied. Of course, the whole sentence has to be denied,
and not just one or more constituents, for its presuppositions to be
maintained.
Note that a negative sentence can be denied; the result is then a positive
sentence. In a more formal notation, the presupposition is written out as
follows.
(39) Bis a presupposition of A if and only if (A→ B) and (¬A → B).
The symbol → is the implication sign for "if-then" and the symbol ¬, is the
symbol for negation. The definition given in (39) is known as the negation
test.
A presupposition is thus the implicit information that must be true for the
sentence to be either true or false and which is not affected by a negation.
The implicit information can be derived from different elements in a
sentence. In (37) and (38) it is derived from the meaning of the words. In
(37), use of the verb "to open" suggests the window is now closed, and in
(38) the word "restored" can lead to the conclusion that at one point or
another there was a democracy in Surinam.
Presuppositions
Presuppositions can be prompted by the words themselves or by
the sentence structure:
(40) Carl has the flu again.
a. Carl has had the flu before.
(41) Carl is a better linguist than Pete.
a. Pete is a linguist.
Presupposition (40a) can be derived from the word "again". In (41)
the comparison implies that Pete has the same profession as Carl.
Emphasis also plays an important role in deriving presuppositions.
Sometimes the emphasis is already clear owing to the syntactical
structure as in cleft constructions, for example, one in which "x is
doing y" is given the structure "it is x who is doing y". This puts extra
emphasis on x, as in the following example.
(42) It was Pete who pointed out the problem to me.
a. Somebody pointed out the problem to me.
Presuppositions
In the following sentence there are four possibilities, depending on
which word receives extra stress.
(43) Pete sells paintings to museums.
a. (Pete) Pete, and no one else.
b. (sells) Pete does not give them away.
c. (paintings) Pete does not sell sculptures.
d. (museums) Pete does not sell paintings to individuals.
Similarly, a certain presupposition can be prompted by a specific
emphasis in (41) and (42). If in (41) "linguist" is stressed, then this
implies (4lb) below. If in (42) "pointed out" is heavily stressed, then
(42b) is a n1ore obvious presupposition than (42a).
Presuppositions can, therefore, be prompted not only by lexical
and syntactical elements but also by intonation phenomena.
(41) b. Carl is in other areas inferior to Pete.
(42) b. I solved the problem myself.
Presuppositions
One of the best-known sentences in presupposition research was
originally used in an article published at the beginning of the last
century by the philosopher Bertrand Russell. The sentence reads as
follows.
(44) The king of France is bald.
This sentence has the following existential presupposition, that is, a
presupposition which can be derived from a proper name or a
nominal constituent containing a definite article.
(44) a. There is one and only one king of France.
Following the definition of presupposition, there is an opposite
claim with the same presupposition.
(45) The king of France is not bald.
In the case of (45), the same presupposition, (44a), is presumed to
be true. These sentences pose a difficult problem for philosophers
and logicians. If it is assumed that either a claim or its negation is
true, so either (44) or ( 45) must be true, and if it is also assumed
that (44a) can be derived from (44) or ( 45), then a presupposition
can be deduced which is logical but untrue: France is, after all, a
republic.
Presuppositions
Although Russell suggested a way of getting around this problem, the
solution remained unsatisfactory. A half-century later the issue became
a topic in presupposition research.
In 1950 the philosopher Peter Strawson provided a pragmatic analysis,
the gist of which is the following: sentences can only be true or false if
their presuppositions are met (i.e., are true).
Only in the situation before the French Revolution was (44a) true;
thereafter it was no longer true. So, only before the French Revolution
were the presuppositions of either (44) or ( 45) met and could they
have a truth value (be either true or false).
The debate between Russell and Strawson played an important role in
launching the research into presuppositions. If the situation in which an
utterance takes place is taken into account, then the research
becomes far more complex. And yet, this extension is a natural one.
A strict approach using the results of the negation test is only a partial
mapping-out of the information implicit in an utterance. From sentence
(46), for example, much more can be deduced than just the existential
presupposition (46a) next slide.
Presuppositions
(46) Go to the student advisor.
a. There is a student advisor.
Since (46) is an order, it can be deduced that the speaker is in a
position to give orders to the addressee. The problem is, however,
that much unspoken information can be derived from language
in use.
A presupposition can even be instantly denied. Example (45) has
(44a) as a presupposition. Language in use, on the other hand, is
not hampered by the conclusion that there is a king of France.
The following utterance is acceptable, at least for some
language users.
(47) The king of France is not bald; there is no king of France.
When discourse is looked at in a specific situation, it is not just the
implicit information derived from the negation test, the
presupposition, that is available; other implicit information is also
derivable from a given sentence. The term for this is inference.
7.6 Inferences