Matters Arising Within Systemic Functional Linguistic Theory And Its Community Of Users
Monday, 23 July 2018
Ignorance Of Incompetence Explained
Monday, 16 July 2018
Tuesday, 10 July 2018
Halliday On Discourse Analysis
Halliday (1985/1994: xvi-xvii):
The current preoccupation is with discourse analysis, or 'text linguistics'; and it has sometimes been assumed that this can be carried on without grammar — or even that it is somehow an alternative to grammar. But this is an illusion. A discourse analysis that is not based on grammar is not an analysis at all, but simply a running commentary on a text … the exercise remains a private one in which one explanation is as good or as bad as another.
A text is a semantic unit, not a grammatical one. But meanings are realised through wordings; and without a theory of wordings — that is, a grammar — there is no way of making explicit one's interpretation of the meaning of a text.
Monday, 9 July 2018
Monday, 25 June 2018
Tuesday, 19 June 2018
Lemke On Covariate "Structure"
Lemke (1988: 159) reinterpreted his 'covariate structure' as a structuring principle, rather than a kind of structure:
My own 'covariate structure' (Lemke 1985), which includes Halliday's univariate type, is for the case of homogeneous relations of co-classed units, and should perhaps be called a 'structuring principle' rather than a kind of structure.
Monday, 18 June 2018
Negotiating Commitment To Affiliation
Monday, 11 June 2018
The Teaching–Learning Unicycle
Wednesday, 6 June 2018
The Distinction Between Generality, Abstraction And Instantiation In SFL
Halliday & Matthiessen (1999: 615):
Halliday & Matthiessen (1999: 144-5):
Blogger Comments:
General terms are not necessarily abstract; a bird is no more abstract than a pigeon.
Halliday & Matthiessen (1999: 144-5):
In other words, the elaboration sets up a relationship either of
- generality (delicacy), of
- abstraction (realisation), or of
- token to type (instantiation);
Blogger Comments:
- Generality/delicacy is equivalent to hyponymy and can be construed as either an identifying or attributive relation;
- Abstraction/realisation can only be construed as an identifying relation;
- Instantiation can only be construed as an attributive relation.
Monday, 28 May 2018
Wednesday, 23 May 2018
Hierarchy vs Taxonomy vs Cline As General Scale Types
Halliday (1961: Section 2.2):
... I have used the terms 'hierarchy', taxonomy', and 'cline' as general scale types.
A hierarchy is taken to mean a system of terms related along a single dimension which must be one involving some form of logical precedence (such as inclusion).
A taxonomy is taken to mean a special type of hierarchy, one with two additional characteristics:
(i) there is a constant relation of each term to the term immediately following it, and a constant reciprocal relation of each to that immediately preceding it; and
(ii) degree is significant, so that the place in order of each one of the terms, statable as the distance in number of steps from either end, is a defining characteristic of that term.
A cline resembles a hierarchy in that it involves relation along a single dimension; but instead of being made up of a number of discrete terms a cline is a continuum carrying potentially infinite gradation.
Monday, 21 May 2018
The Facial Expression Of Content
Saturday, 19 May 2018
The Meaning Of 'Topology' In SFL
Lemke (unpublished, undated):
A topology, in mathematical terms, is A SET OF CRITERIA FOR ESTABLISHING DEGREES OF NEARNESS OR PROXIMITY AMONG THE MEMBERS OF SOME CATEGORY. It turns a 'collection' or set of objects into a space defined by the relations of those objects. Objects which are more alike by the criteria are represented in this space as being closer together; those which are less alike are further apart. There can be multiple criteria, which may be more or less independent of one another, so that two texts, for instance may be closer together in one dimension (say horizontal distance), but further apart in another (vertical distance). What is essential, obviously, is our choice of the criteria, the parameters, that define similarity and difference on each dimension.
Monday, 14 May 2018
Making Meaning Of Wording
Wednesday, 9 May 2018
Foucault's Polemic Against Polemics
Monday, 7 May 2018
Friday, 4 May 2018
Two Reasons Why Halliday Does Not Use The Term 'Syntax' [Contra Fawcett]
Monday, 30 April 2018
Saturday, 28 April 2018
Experiential Semantics: Types Of Participant, Types Of Thing
Thursday, 26 April 2018
Martin's Rebranding Of Halliday's 'Extended Numerative' As "Focus"
From Deploying Functional Grammar (Martin et al 2010: 169):
However, there is one type of structure where the two types of structure [logical and experiential] are out of phase with one another … . This happens when the Head is a noun that does not represent a thing in its own right but rather an elaboration or extension of another thing, as in the side of the house, two metres of fabric, another cup of coffee. … we'll suggest an analysis here that treats these structures as having an embedded nominal group with the multivariate function Focus …
two
|
metres
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of
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fabric
|
|
multivariate
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Focus
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Thing
|
||
univariate
|
β
|
Head
|
β
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|
Blogger Comments:
To be clear, this is merely a rebranding of Halliday's 'complex Numerative' (IFG2: 195-6) or 'extended Numerative' (IFG3: 332-5; IFG4: 394-6) as "Focus". The analysis above is merely a rebranding of:
two
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metres
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of
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fabric
|
|
experiential
|
extended
Numerative: quantum
|
Thing
|
||
logical
|
Premodifier
|
Head
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Postmodifier
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|
No argument is provided in support of the change of terminology, which fails to acknowledge its Numerative function, and the term itself is textual, not experiential, in orientation, and is already in use in SFL theory for the focus of New information.
For other examples of Martin rebranding other people's ideas, see here.
For other examples of Martin rebranding other people's ideas, see here.
Labels:
Deploying Functional Grammar,
Group,
Jim Martin,
Rebranding,
Structure
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