Stylistics
Stylistics
Stylistics
An Outline
The origin of the term Style and Stylistics: Lat - stylus - a stick made of material for
writing. Stylistics comes from French “Stylistique” -instrument for writing.
The subject of stylistics has so far not been definitely outlined. This is due to a number of
reasons. First of all there is confusion between the terms style and stylistics. The first concept is
so broad that it is hardly possible to regard it as a term. We speak of style in architecture,
literature, behavior, linguistics, dress and other fields of human activity.
Even in linguistics the word style is used so widely that it needs interpretation. The
majority of linguists who deal with the subject of style agree that the term applies to the
following fields of investigation:
6) The splitting of the literary language into separate subsystems called functional styles;
1. There is a widely held view that style is the correspondence between thought and
expression. The notion is based on the assumption that of the two functions of language:
language is said to have two functions: it serves as a means of communication and also as a
means of shaping one's thoughts. The first function is called communicative, the second -
expressive, the latter finds its proper materialization in strings of sentences especially arranged
to convey the ideas and also to get the desired response.
Indeed, every sentence uttered may be characterized from two sides: whether or not the string of
language forms expressed is something well-known and therefore easily understood and to some
extent predictable; whether or not the string of language forms is built anew; is, as it were, an
innovation made on the part of the listener to get at the meaning of the utterance and is therefore
unpredictable.
Many great minds have made valuable observations on the interrelation between thought and
expression. The main trend in most of these observations may be summarized as follows: the
linguistic form of the idea expressed always reflects the peculiarities of the thought. And vice
versa, the character of the thought will always in a greater or lesser degree manifests itself in the
language forms chosen for the expression of the idea.
This notion presupposes the use of bare language forms deprived of any stylistic devices
of any expressive means deliberately employed. Perhaps it is due to this notion that the word
“style” itself still bears a somewhat derogatory meaning. It is associated with the idea of
something pompous, showy artificial, something that is set against simplicity, truthfulness, the
natural. Shakespeare was a determined enemy of all kinds of embellishments of language.
3. A very popular notion among practical linguists, teachers of language, is that style is
technique of expression. In this sense style is generally defined as the ability to write clearly,
correctly and in a manner calculated to the interest of the reader. Style in this utilitarian sense
should be taught, but it belongs to the realm of grammar, and not to stylistics. It sets up a number
of rules as to how to speak and write and discards all kinds of deviations as being violations of
the norm. The norm itself becomes rigid, self-sustained and to a very great extent inflexible.
4. The term style also signifies a literary genre. Thus we speak of classical style or the
style of classicism; realistic style; the style of romanticism and so on. On the other hand, the term
is widely used in literature, being applied to the various kinds of literary work, the fable, novel,
ballad, story etc. Thus we speak of a story being written in the style of a fable or we speak of the
characteristic features of the epistolary style or the essay and so on.
5. Finally there is one more important application of the term style. We speak of the
different styles of language. Thus we may distinguish the following styles within the English
literary language: 1) the belles- lettres style; 2) the publicistic style; 3) the newspaper style; 4)
the scientific prose style; 5) the style of official documents and presumably some others. The
classification presented here is not arbitrary; the work is still in the observational stage. The
classification is not proof against criticism, though no one will deny that the five groups of styles
exist in the English literary language.
In linguistics there are different terms to denote those particular means by which a writer
obtains his effect. Expressive means, stylistic means, stylistic devices and other terms are all
used indiscriminately. For our purposes it is necessary to make a distinction between expressive
means and stylistic devices. All stylistic means of a language can be divided into expressive
means, which are used in some specific way, and special devices called stylistic devices.
The expressive means of a language are those phonetic means, morphological forms,
means of word-building, and lexical, phraseological and syntactical forms, all of which
function in the language for emotional or logical intensification of the utterance. These
intensifying forms of the language have been fixed in grammars and dictionaries. Some of them
are normalized, and good dictionaries label them as intensifiers. In most cases they have
corresponding neutral synonymous forms. Expressive means (EM) of the language are the choice
of words, clauses, sentences, a combination of sounds, which signal additional information
(emotive, expressive, evaluative, and stylistic). (I.V.A)
Expressive means (EM) (выразительные средства) are those phonetic, morphological,
word-building, lexical, phraseological and syntactical forms which exist in language-as-a-system
for the purpose of logical and/or emotional intensification of the utterance. (I.R.G)
Among the morphological expressive means the use of the Present indefinite instead of
the Past Indefinite must be mentioned first. This has already been acknowledged as a special
means and is named the Historical Present. In describing some past events the author uses the
present tense, thus achieving a more vivid presentation of what was going on.
The use of “shall” in the second and third person may also be regarded as an expressive
means. Compare the following synonymous forms and you will not fail to observe the
intensifying element in the sentence with “shall”.
Among word-building means we find a great many forms which serve to make the
utterance more expressive or to intensify it. The diminutive suffixes as - у (- ie), - let, e.g., dear,
dearie, stream, streamlet, add some emotional coloring to the words.
Certain affixes have gained such a power of expressiveness that they begin functioning as
separate words, absorbing the generalizing meaning they usually attach to different roots, as for
example: -ism and - ologies.
At the lexical level there are a great many words which due to their inner expressiveness,
constitute a special layer. There are words with emotive meaning only, like interjections, words
which have both referential and emotive meaning, like some of the qualitative adjectives, words
belonging to special groups of Literary English (poetic, archaic) or of non - standard English
( slang, vulgar, etc.) and some other groups.
The same can be said of the set expressions of the language. Proverbs and sayings as
well as catch - words for a considerable number of language units serve to make speech more
emphatic, mainly from the emotional point of view. Their use in everyday speech can hardly be
overestimated. Some of these proverbs and sayings are so well - known that their use in the
process of communication passes almost unobserved.
The expressive means of the language are studied respectively in manuals of phonetics,
grammar, lexicology and stylistics. Stylistics, however, observes not only the nature of an
expressive means, but also its potential capacity of becoming a stylistic device.
What then is a stylistic device? It is a conscious and intentional literary use of some of
the facts of the language including EM in which the most essential features both structural
and semantic forms of the language are raised to a generalized level and thereby present a
generative model. Most stylistic devices may be regarded as aiming at the further intensification
in the corresponding EM.
This conscious transformation of a language fact into a stylistic device has been observed
by certain linguists whose interests in scientific research have gone beyond the boundaries of
grammar.
The birth of a SD is not accidental. Language means which are used with more or less
definite aims of communication and in one and the same function in various passages of writing
begin gradually to develop new features, a wider range of functions and become a relative means
of the language. It would perhaps be more correct to say that unlike expressive means stylistic
devices are patterns of the language whereas the expressive means do not form patterns. They
are just like words themselves, they are facts of the language, and as such are, or should be,
registered in dictionaries.
The interrelation between expressive means and stylistic devices can be worded in terms
of the theory of information. Expressive means have a greater degree of predictability than
stylistic devices. The latter may appear in an environment which may seem alien and therefore be
only slightly or not at all predictable. Expressive means are commonly used in language, and are
therefore easily predictable. Stylistic devices carry a greater amount of information because if
they are at all predictable they are less predictable than expressive means. It follows that stylistic
devices must be regarded as a special code which has still to be deciphered.
Not every stylistic use of a language fact will come under the term SD. There are
practically unlimited possibilities of presenting any language fact in what is vaguely called its
stylistic use. Summing it all up the following definitions of style and stylistics can be suggested.
I.R.Galperin: Stylisitics is a branch of general linguistics, which deals with the following
two interdependent tasks:
a) Studies the totality of special linguistic means (stylistic devices and expressive
means) which secure the desirable effect of the utterance;
b) Studies certain types of text “discourse” which due to the choice and arrangement of
the language are distinguished by the pragmatic aspect of communication (functional styles).
1) Linguo-stylistics;
2) Literary stylistics: is to explicate the message, to interpret and evaluate literary writings as the
works of art.
The subject of stylistics can be outlined as the study of the nature, functions and structure
of stylistic devices, on the one hand, and, on the other, the study of each style of language as
classified above, i.e. its aim, its structure, its characteristic features and the effect it produces, as
well as its interrelation with other styles of language.
The points of difference proceed from the different points of analysis. While linguo-stylistics
studies:
2. The linguistic nature of the expressive means of the language, their systematic character and
their functions .
Decoding stylistics
A comparatively new branch of stylistics is the decoding stylistics, which can be traced back to
the works of L. V. Shcherba, В. А. Larin, М, Riffaterre, R. Jackobson and other scholars of the
Prague linguistic circle. А serious contribution into this branch of stylistic study was also made
bу Prof. I.У. Arnold. Each act of speech has the performer, or sender of speech and the recipient.
Тhе former does the act of еnсоding and the latter the act of decoding the information.
If we analyse the text from the author's (encoding) point of view we should consider the epoch,
the historical situation, the personal political, social and aesthetic views of the author.
But if we try to treat the same text from the reader's angle of view we shall have to disregard
this, background knowledge and get the maximum information from the text itself (its
vocabu1ary, соmроsition, sеntеnсе arrangement, еtс.) The first approach manifests the
prevalence of the literary analysis. Тhе second is based almost exclusively оn the linguistic
analysis. Decoding stylistics is an attempt to harmoniously соmbine the two methоds of stylistic
research and еnаbе the scholar to interpret а work of art with а minimum loss of its purport and
message.