speech act 1

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lezione 15 del corso teorie della comunicazione – Genova CP

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Page 1: Speech act 1

lezione 15 del corso teorie della comunicazione – Genova CP

Page 2: Speech act 1

1. what are they?

Page 3: Speech act 1

LOCUTIONARY ACT(act of saying)

ILLOCUTIONARY ACT(act we do in saying...)

[conventions]

PERLOCUTIONARY ACT(act we do by saying...)

[consequences]

phonetics (form)syntaxsemantics (content)

felicity conditions(illocutionary “force”)

context dependence

(2 examples Mario and “her”)

Page 4: Speech act 1

2. how to classify them?

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1) “explicit performatives” (Austin) (illocutionary clause (Searle))

2) different criteria (Searle):*Illocutionary point* (essential condition)– illocutionary force– direction of fit– sincerity conditions (psychological state)

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Ill. force direction of fit sincerity condition

Assertion worldwords believe in what you assert

Command wordsworld will of future action

Commitment wordsworld intention to fulfill the action

Expression possibility to express psic.states

Declaration words world will of future action

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1.  Assertive: represents a state of affairs. E.g. stating, claiming, hypothesizing, describing, telling, insisting,  suggesting, ...

2. Directive: getting the addressee to do something. E.g. ordering, commanding, daring, defying, challenging

                            

3. Commissive: getting the speaker to do something. E.g. promising, threatening, intending, advising, warning, betting, vowing to do or to refrain from doing something   ...

                          

4. Expressive: expressing the mental state of the speaker about an event presumed to be true.. E.g. congratulating, thanking, deploring, condoling, welcoming, apologizing    

 

5. Declaration: bringing into existence the state of affairs to which it refers. E.g. blessing, firing, baptizing, bidding, ...

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3. when and how to use which speech acts?

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1) open the window!2) will you open the window, please?

1) what time is it?2) do you know the time?

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John Searle:preparatory condition

Robin Lakoff:following the rules of the “logic of politeness”

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1. Don’t Impose

2. Give Options

3. Make your Receiver Feel Good

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is the speaker able to fulfill the sincerity conditions? or better: can he realize the illocutionary point? (felicity conditions in general include intentions,

sentiments, psychological states, but also conventions, physical possibilities, practical possibilities...)

what does the choice of a particular kind of illocutionary act reveal of the speaker?