Discourse Analysis Notes
Discourse Analysis Notes
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DISCOURSE ANALYSIS
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DISCOURSE ANALYSIS
Introduction
Discourse analysis (DA) is a broad field of study that draws some of its
theories and methods of analysis from disciplines such as linguistics,
sociology, philosophy and psychology. More importantly, discourse
analysis has provided models and methods of engaging issues that
emanate from disciplines such as education, cultural studies,
communication and so on. The vast nature of discourse analysis makes it
impossible for us to discuss all that the reader needs to know about it in
an introductory work of this nature. However, the chief aim of this chapter
is to introduce the reader to some of the basic terms and concepts involved
in discourse analysis. The reader is also introduced to some of the
approaches to linguistic study of discourse.
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Interactional Sociolinguistic
The approach to discourse known as ‘interactional sociolinguistics’ is
essentially derived from the works of the anthropologist John Gumperz
and the sociologist Erving Goffman. The approach, according to Schiffrin,
has the most diverse disciplinary origins …it is based in anthropology,
sociology, and linguistics, and shares the concerns of all three fields with
culture, society, and language. The contribution to interactional
sociolinguistics made by John Gumperz provides an understanding of how
people may share grammatical knowledge of a language, but differently
Discourse Analysis – Ikenna Kamalu & Ayo Osisanwo (2015) ▪ 173
S setting: the time and space within which speech events occur –
physical circumstances
P participants: the speaker and the listener (or the addresser and the
addressee) in a speech situation
E ends: the goal/ purpose of the speaker
A acts: the actual form and content of what is said by the speaker (i.e
message form and content)
K key: the tone/manner of the message
I instrumentalities: the channel (verbal, nonverbal, physical)
through which the message is passed across
N norms of interaction and interpretation: the tradition – specific
properties attached to speaking/interpretation of norms within
cultural belief systems
G genre: the style (textual categories)
Pragmatics
Pragmatics as an approach to discourse is chiefly concerned with three
concepts (meaning, context, communication) that are themselves
extremely vast. The scope of pragmatics is so wide that it faces definitional
dilemmas similar to those faced by discourse analysis. Earlier studies on
pragmatics defined it as a branch of semiotics, the study of signs, but
contemporary discussions of pragmatics all take the relationship of sign to
their user to be central to pragmatics. Jacob Mey (2001) defines
pragmatics as the study of the use of language in human communication
as determined by the conditions of society. Schiffrin (1994) focuses on
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Quantity:
1. Make your contribution as informative as is required (for the current
purpose of the exchange)
2. Do not make your contribution more informative than is required
Quantity:
Try to make your contribution one that is true
1. Do not say what you believe to be false
2. Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence
Relation: Be relevant
Manner:
Be perspicuous
1. Avoid obscurity of expression
Discourse Analysis – Ikenna Kamalu & Ayo Osisanwo (2015) ▪ 177
2. Avoid ambiguity
3. Be brief (avoid unnecessary prolixity)
4. Be orderly
Conversation Analysis
Conversation analysis is an approach to discourse which has been
articulated by a group of scholars known as ethnomethodologists. They
are known as ethnomethodolgists because they set out to discover what
methods people use to participate in and make sense of interaction. The
ethnomethodologists examined what people did with their words, when
they were not consciously producing samples for linguists. They felt that
the examples produced by professional linguists were unnatural, since
these utterances were not embedded in actually occurring talk, because
actual talk, by contrast, was typically found in everyday conversation
(Mey, 2001:137). Mey further argues that contrary to the received bias of
official linguistics, conversation talk was not in the least incoherent or
irregular. It was discovered that the rules that conversation followed were
more like the rules that people had devised for other social activities; and
they resembled those discovered by researchers in sociology and
anthropology for all sorts of social interaction, much more than they
resembled linguistic rules. Hence the need to develop a technique that was
in many respects different from the classical transcription techniques of
linguistics. Schiffrin (1994:232) contends that conversation analysis
provides its own assumptions, its own methodology (including its own
terminology), and its own way of theorizing. The focus of the conversation
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Variation Analysis
The initial methodology and theory underlying the variationist approach to
discourse were those of William Labov. The variationist approach is the
only approach discussed in this section that has its origins solely within
linguistics. The approach is concerned with the study of variation and
change in language. The theory proceeds from the assumptions that
linguistic variation is patterned both socially and linguistically, and that
such patterns can be discovered only through systematic investigation of a
speech community. Thus, variationists set out to discover patterns in the
distribution of alternative ways of saying the same thing, that is, the social
and linguistic factors that are responsible for variation (Schiffrin, 1994:
282). Although traditional variationist studies were chiefly concerned with
the semantically equivalent variants (what Labov calls “alternative ways of
saying the same thing”), such studies have now been extended to texts.
Schiffrin also notes that it is in the search for text structure, the analysis
of text-level variants and of how text constrains other forms, that a
variationist approach to discourse has developed. She further contends
that one of the main tasks in variation analysis is to discover constraints
on alternative realizations of an underlying form: such constrains (that
can be linguistic and/ or social) help determine which realization of a
single underlying representation appears in the surface form of utterance.
Again, since variationists try to discover patterns in the distribution of
alternative ways of saying the same thing, that is, the social and linguistic
constraints on linguistic variation, an initial step in variationist studies is
to establish which forms alternate with one another and in which
environments they can do so. Variationists use quantitative methods of
Discourse Analysis – Ikenna Kamalu & Ayo Osisanwo (2015) ▪ 179
Discourse Rankscale
The concept of ‘rankscale’ is popular in grammar or linguistics. By ‘rank’,
we mean the order of progression on a ladder. By that, we may have
something at the base (bottom) and another at the apex (top). The
grammatical rankscale in English grammar or linguistics as recognized by
Halliday (1961, 2004) has the morpheme at the base, and the sentence at
the apex. Therefore, the linguistic grammatical rankscale progresses from
morpheme-word-group/phrase-clause-sentence. In the same vein, Sinclair
and Coulthard (1975) proposed a five-unit rankscale for discourse. Also,
from the lowest to the highest, we have ACT-MOVE-EXCHANGE-
TRANSACTION-LESSON.
1. ACT: Act is the lowest unit on the discourse rankscale which is not
divisible. It can be created using grammatical units such as words,
groups, clauses or sentences. For example, (i) She has arrived (Act -
Sentence), (ii) Over the bar (Act - Group), (iii) One (Act - word). An
Act can be informative, eliciting or directing. Therefore, there are
three types of Act. These are informative, elicitation and directive.
(i) Informative: Informative act gives information which can
either yield a positive or a negative response. It gives
information to discourse participants. Let us consider the
conversation between the following participants:
Speaker A: The food is ready
Speaker B: Thank you very much (Positive)
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Each of these exchanges consists of three moves. The first move ('What
time is it?') functions as a question. The first move in (2) is heard as
making a request. Types of exchange include free exchanges, bound
exchanges, opening exchanges, medical exchanges and closing exchanges.
However, it should be noted that exchanges can still be as many as the
discourses of different fields of study or profession.
Discourse Features/Structure
There are different terms associated with the study of discourse. Some of
them include what is known as discourse features or structures.
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Reference
Reference has to do with the relations between language and extra-
linguistic reality. It has to do with retrieving information for referential
meaning. Reference can also be seen as a relationship between an
expression and what it stands for in the outside world. Basically, there
are two types of co-reference relations. These are endophoric and
exophoric references. The interpretation of endophoric reference lies
within a text. In other words, cohesive ties are formed within the text. It
can be further divided into anaphoric and cataphoric references.
Exophoric reference, on the other hand, refers to a reference which plays
no part in textual cohesion. The interpretation here lies outside the text.
A simpler way of putting them is to say:
outside the text to know that the government refers to the people in power
in that particular country.
Substitution
Substitution has to do with the relation between linguistic items, such as
words and phrases. Substitution is similar to ellipsis, in that, in English, it
operates either at the nominal, verbal or clausal level. The items commonly
used for substitution in English are: One/ones, do, the entire clause
Nominal Substitution: One(s): I offered her a drink. She said she didn't
want one.
Verbal Substitution: Do: Did Ayo inform the School of the changes? He
might have done.
Discourse Analysis – Ikenna Kamalu & Ayo Osisanwo (2015) ▪ 187
Ellipsis
Ellipsis simply has to do with deletion. It is the omission of elements
which are normally required by the grammar of a language, but which the
speaker or writer assumes are obvious from the context of the text. To the
speaker or writer, therefore, the deletion of such items will not bring about
any serious change. The essence of such a deletion is to make room for
grammatical cohesion in discourse. There are broadly three types of
ellipses which include nominal ellipsis, verbal ellipsis and clausal ellipsis.
Conjunction
Conjunction is also a grammatical device which is used to achieve
cohesion. It includes the use of conjuncts such as and, yet, although, but
etc. A conjunction presupposes a textual sequence and signals a
relationship between segments of the discourse. There are many
conjunctive items. In fact, they are almost not exhaustive, except when
considered from the natural data, especially spoken, a few conjunctions
(and, but, so and then) will be identified. Some of the types of conjunction
include additive, adversative, causal, continuative and temporal meanings.
Let us consider the following examples. Joshua is good. And he's very
reliable (additive). I've travelled all over the world but I've never seen a
place as underdeveloped as this (adversative). He fell from the hill and got
his bones broken (causal). She has to love you, after all you fulfilled all the
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Conclusion
We have tried in this chapter to discuss aspects of discourse analysis we
consider fundamental to the study and analysis of discourse. We
attempted to define the concept of discourse and the linguistic analysis of
discourse. Further, we discussed some of the linguistic approaches to
discourse, discourse rankscale and discourse features. The relationship
between DA and social context, DA and grammar, DA and vocabulary,
and DA and phonology were also examined. We also endeavoured to
introduce the reader to critical discourse analysis (CDA). As we noted in
the introductory part of the chapter, DA is a vast discipline and insights
from it have been used in solving problems that originate from so many
other disciplines and domains of study. The reader may wish to read the
chapter on ‘computer-mediated discourse’ (CMD) by Innocent Chiluwa and
the one on ‘pragmatics’ by Akin Odebunmi to complement our effort in this
chapter.
Authors:
Ikenna Kamalu, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of English Studies,
University of Port Harcourt. His research interests include stylistics, discourse
analysis, and metaphor analysis.
Ayo Osisanwo, PhD, lectures in the Department of English, University of Ibadan, Ibadan.
His research interests include discourse analysis, stylistics, and phonology.
Ikenna Kamalu & Ayo Osisanwo. 2015. Discourse analysis. In Ikenna Kamalu and Isaac
Tamunobelema. (Eds.) Issues in the study of language and literature. Ibadan: Kraft Books
Limited. Pp 169-195. ISBN 978-918-321-0.