Stylistics routledge English Language Introductions



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Stylistics a resource book for students

You’re fed up!
Who do you think’s been doing it all week?
In this exchange, the proposition about being fed up is used in a ‘straight’ way by
the first speaker, but in an ironic way by the second. This is because the proposition
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is explicitly 
echoed
by the second speaker during their expression of their immediate
reaction to it. The status of the proposition when echoed is therefore not the same
as when it is used first time out.
We have already seen in this book an example of the echoic form of irony at work.
In unit C1, it was observed how the greater part of Dorothy Parker’s poem ‘One
Perfect Rose’ echoed ironically the lyric love poem of the seventeenth or eighteenth
century. This principle of ironic echo is absolutely central to the concept of 
parody
.
Once echoed, a text becomes part of a new discourse context so it no longer has the
illocutionary force (A9) it once had in its original context. Parody can take any partic-
ular anterior text as its model, although more general characteristics of other genres
of discourse, as we saw in the case of ‘One Perfect Rose’, can also be brought into
play. This broad capacity of parody to function as a ‘discourse of allusion’ is the
substance of Nash’s reading at the end of this thread, and readers will find there some
further illustrations of this technique.
The distinction between parody and satire is not an easy one to draw, but it is
commonly assumed that satire has an aggressive element which is not necessarily
present in parody. How this translates into stylistic terms is that satirical discourse,
as well as having an echoic element, requires a further kind of ironic twist or distor-
tion in its textual make-up. This additional distortion means that while parodies can
remain affectionate to their source, satire can never be so. Consider, for example,
Jonathan Swift’s 
A Modest Proposal
(1729) which lays good claim to being the 
most famous piece of satire ever written. Swift’s text echoes the genre of the early
eighteenth-century pamphlet, and more narrowly the proliferation of pamphlets
offering economic solutions to what was then perceived as the ‘Irish problem’. The
opening of the Proposal reviews various schemes and recommendations to alleviate
poverty and starvation, but it is only after about nine hundred words of text that its
mild-mannered speaker eventually details his ‘proposal’:
(4)
I shall now therefore humbly propose my own thoughts, which I hope will
not be liable to the least objection.
I have been assured by a very knowing American of my acquaintance in
London, that a young healthy child well nursed is at a year old a most
delicious, nourishing, and wholesome food, whether stewed, roasted,
baked, or boiled; and I make no doubt that it will equally serve in a
fricassee or a ragout.
(Swift 1986 [1729]: 2175–6)
While Swift’s text echoes the conventions of a particular genre of discourse, it
contains the requisite distortion that marks it out as satire. This distortion comes
through the startling sequence where the persona proposes to alleviate the burden
of overpopulation in Ireland by eating that country’s children. This twist is both
brutal and stark, and marks an abrupt shift from a seemingly moral framework to a
framework of abnormality and obscenity. Just how ‘humorous’ this particular brand
of satire is, where the sense of opposition between what is morally acceptable and
what is not is very wide, is difficult to assess (see further Simpson (2003)). What it
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does show is how satire is created through both an echo of another discourse 
and
an opposition or distortion within its own stylistic fabric.
Summary
This unit has introduced some of the basic principles of punning and other forms
of verbal humour. Although no more than a snapshot of an enormous area of inquiry,
it should have demonstrated both how techniques in stylistics are well suited to the
exploration of verbal humour and why stylisticians have shown a continued inter-
ested over the years in this area of study. One such stylistician is Walter Nash, whose
essay on the techniques of parody and allusion, complete with some entertaining self-
penned parodies, is reproduced as reading D12.
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SECTION B
DEVELOPMENT
DOING STYLISTICS
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DEVELOPMENTS IN STYLISTICS
This unit looks at some of the important influences on stylistics that have helped to
shape its development over the years. From the Classical period onwards there has
been continued healthy interest among scholars in the relationship between patterns
of language in a text and the way a text communicates. The Greek rhetoricians, for
example, were particularly interested in the tropes and devices that were used by
orators for effective argument and persuasion, and there is indeed a case for saying
that some stylistic work is very much a latter-day embodiment of traditional rhetoric.
However, there is one particular field of academic inquiry, from the early twentieth
century, that has had a more direct and lasting impact on the methods of contem-
porary stylistics. This field straddles two interrelated movements in linguistics, known
as Russian Formalism and Prague School Structuralism. Of the former movement,
key figures include Viktor Shklovsky and Boris Tomashevsky; of the the latter, Jan
Mukarovsky and Wilhem Mathesius. One scholar, whose work literally links both
movements, is Roman Jakobson, who moved from the Moscow circle to the Prague
group in 1920. Many of the central ideas of these two schools find their reflexes in
contemporary stylistics and two of the more durable theoretical contributions are
the focus of this unit. These are the concept of 

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