Directive and Commissive
Directive and Commissive
Directive and Commissive
BY
SUPERVISED BY
PROF. , Ph.D.
2021 A.D.
بسم هللا الرمحن الرحمي
()َو ُقْل َر ِّب ِز ْد يِن ِعْلًام
Most Merciful
Acknowledgement iii
1. Introduction 5
13
16
7. Method of Analysis
18
8. Conclusions
73
Bibliography
77
1. Introduction
Apart from the study of promises, Searle (1969) elucidate other speech
acts counting on the classification of felicity conditions and illocutionary force;
thus. offering an analysis of requests, assertions, questions, and thanks, etc.
For instance, a comparison made on these dimensions between requests and
warnings makes the point obvious (ibid: 66-76):
However, Searle was not content with his method of classification. This
is because sub-types of questions, for instance, can be multiplied, and there
may be a boundless number of tables like the one above that can be
compared. What would be more outstanding and accurate would be to take
some overall schema that could demarcate the possible illocutionary force on
principled grounds (Levinson, 1983: 239).
Indeed, Searle (1976, cited in Levinson; 1983: 240) states that there are
just five basic kinds of speech acts in which illocutionary acts (IAs) play a vital
role. In his taxonomy, IAs are employed to mean the speech acts, classified as
follows:
(i) Representatives, which commit the speaker to the truth of the
expressed propositions (paradigm cases: asserting, concluding,
remarking, etc.)
(ii) Directives, which are attempts by the speaker to get the addressee to
do something (paradigm cases: requesting, questioning,
commanding, etc.)
(iii) Commissives, which commit the speaker to the future course of
action (paradigm cases: promising, threatening, offering).
(iv) Expressives, which express a psychological state (paradigm cases:
thanking, apologizing, welcoming, congratulating).
(v) Declarations, which effect immediate changes in the institutional
state of affairs and which tend to rely on elaborate extra-linguistic
institutions (paradigm cases: excommunicating, declaring war,
Christening, etc.).
7. Method of Analysis
Arthur miller`s masterpiece Death of a Salesman will be analyzed in terms of
directives and commissives. A number of excerpts of this play are selected
randomly from act 1 and act 2 for the sake of the analysis. The method of
analysis used in this study is both function-based and character-based. It is
function-based that involves the main concentration being on the directive and
commissive function of utterances, irrespective of their mood or form. At the
same time, the study is character-based that involves the focal point of the
analysis being on the directive and commissive speech acts of the major
characters, namely Linda and Willy.
The study of directive and commissive speech acts in this play is very
significant to reveal how Willy `s character comes to be shown as a “man lives
in illusion”. Most of the speech acts are uttered by Willy and Linda, as they do
most of the talk, and they are the main characters in the play.
In the turn (1) below, Linda begins with giving a command, and then she
continues with an expressive act. After that she issues a command to Willy. The
overall effect of these three acts (, the first being paralinguistic,) is that the
speaker can emphasize his power over the hearer through his order.
(1) LINDA (resigned): Well, you’ll just have to take a rest, Willy, you
can’t continue this way.
But if this order is to be examined more carefully, it has the function of blaming
both Willy`s cold indifference to his heath.
The next direct directive is issued in (2) below which is followed by a
suggestion.
(2) LINDA: Take an aspirin. Should I get you an aspirin? It’ll soothe
you.
Here, the speaker shows her interest and love for her husband by
decreasing the factor of obligation via being more sentimental. Now, the
second utterance of turn (2) is followed by Wally’s utterance with the different
illocutionary point but with an increase in the illocutionary force. This increase
in force happens because Willy wants to assert the promise of his still capability
of traveling again despite his sickness and his old age (more than seventy).
Below Willy uses a speech act of commissive, namely a promise:
(3) WILLY: I’ll have to send a wire to Portland. I’m supposed to see Brown
and Morrison tomorrow morning at ten o’clock to show the line. Goddammit,
The sincerity condition on orders is that Linda wants Willy to be aware of the
fact that the work of a traveller salesman becomes unsuitable for his age. This
job requires him to drive for long hours from one town into another. He
becomes more than seventy and his sight gets weaker and weaker. Linda
repeats her order in (74), when she sees his insistence on traveling, which
proves his insincerity.
(4) LINDA: Willy, Talk to them again. There’s no reason why you can’t
work in New York.
(5) WILLY: I’ll start out in the morning. Maybe I’ll feel better in the
morning.
Linda 14 9
Willy 12 11
Total number
of 26 20 46
Directives &
commissives
8. Conclusions
The present study arrived at a number of the main conclusions:
1- In the data analyzed, there is no obvious performative verb, e.g. “to
command”, “to ask”, “to demand”, while implicit illocutionary acts are
manipulated commonly for directive and commissive speech acts. This fact
shows the significance of implicit acts in the dramatic language.
2- The analysis of the data reveals that the use of directive speech acts is larger
than the commissive speech acts. This is because people in everyday language
tend to make suggestions, requests and orders than threats or refusals.
3- It is important to emphasize the role played by both linguistic and situational
contexts surrounding an utterance so as to recognize the implicit performative
used by the speaker.
4- Besides the use of implicit directives, there are a huge number of indirect
directive speech acts. In the selected data, the realization of most directives are
through the use of interrogatives, instead of imperatives or declaratives.
5- The realization of Directives can be represented in different syntactic forms
(or sentence types), particularly in interrogatives. This fact indicates that
interrogative forms are the most productive kind of sentence used in the
dramatic language, this is because they perform wide pragmatic functions.
Interrogatives are characterized by flexibility that they can be employed not
only as questions, but also as acts of ordering, insisting, invoking, suggesting,
etc.
6- Despite using directive speech acts, the writer of the play could implicitly
communicate his philosophical and political beliefs to his audience. These
beliefs are conveyed by the writer on the authorial level and communicated to
the audience through the characters, on the textual level.
7- In the dramatic language, there are a lot of examples in which the readers of
the text cannot easily recognize if a certain speech act is a directive or not, on
account of the unrecognition of their illocutionary forces. For instance, in turn
(1) there is an interrogative: “Should I get you an aspirin?”. Is it a kind offer to
the hearer that she should bring him aspirin, or is it a real question? However,
by analyzing elements such as the context, the speaker’s character and intention,
the researcher can recognize it as a directive.
Bibliography