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grammatical and lexical devices are separate phenomena; it must be emphasized
that cohesion for the reader follows from their interplay in the first place.
Before proceeding to concrete examples of lexical cohesion in the material
under investigation, it is useful to sum up at least the basic
approaches to lexical
cohesion within the models proposed by Halliday and Hasan (1976), Hasan (1984),
Hoey (1991) and Tanskanen (1995). Halliday and Hasan originally distinguished
only two categories of lexical cohesion (i.e. ‘reiteration’ and ‘collocation’),
which later proved insufficient and led to the modification of lexical cohesion
relations by Hasan (1984: 2002), who proposed two completely new categories of
‘general’ and ‘instantial’ relations; the former included ‘repetition’, ‘synonymy’,
‘antonymy’, ‘hyponymy’ and ‘meronymy’, the latter ‘equivalence’, ‘naming’
and ‘semblance’. Still, Halliday and Hasan consider cohesion and coherence as
interdependent phenomena.
According to Hoey (1991), lexical cohesion, due to its high frequency of
occurrence, is the main contributor to the creation of texture and is stronger than
grammar; lexical relations may create cohesion between neighbouring
sentences
(i.e. local cohesion) as well as across larger chunks where cohesion operates
between sentences separated by several other sentences (i.e. distant cohesion).
The connections between the sentences, which Hoey labels as ‘bonds’, play a
key role in discourse coherence in that they ensure “topic continuity” and activate
“relevant discourse-processing knowledge” (Dontcheva-Navratilova 2011: 42).
Tanskanen (1995: 533) aims to define cohesion in more general terms in
order to provide a model which could be used for analysis of cohesion in different
types of discourse and under different conditions. Therefore, she proposes two
general categories: ‘reiteration’ and ‘collocation’. Unlike other researchers
she abandons traditional terms from lexical semantics, such
as synonymy or
antonymy. Reiteration within her model comprises a) repetition (
map
–
map
;
a plan
–
planned
); b) equivalence (
establish
–
set up
); c) generalisation (
buses
–
public transport
); d) specification (
public transport
–
underground
); e) co-
specification (
buses
–
underground
) and f) contrast (accept – refuse). Collocation
comprises a) ordered set (
Monday
–
Thursday
) and b) implication (
winter
–
cold
;
armies
–
war
).
Tanskanen’s research into lexical cohesion shows that reiteration is
more
frequent than collocation and “dominates especially under more difficult
communicative conditions” where cohesion is relatively dense (i.e.
greater
proximity between items in pairs); collocation “is used to a greater extent in less
demanding conditions”, where the cohesion is less dense (i.e. there are greater
distances between items in pairs) (ibid.: 537).
The repertoire and frequency of occurrence of lexical cohesive devices
depends at least to a certain extent on the discourse type, i.e. the range and types
of cohesive devices employed in a narrative, for example, will differ considerably
117
from those in an advertisement or a newspaper report. Also, various discourse
types
allow inner variation, i.e. newspaper reports can be further sub-divided into
a number of sub-types, usually depending on the main theme. Within the sub-
type of crime reports these include, for example, reports on robberies,
accidents,
murders, verdict reports, etc. In order to depict the variation in the newspaper
reports under investigation and map principal differences between the serious and
popular British press it appears particularly suitable to deal with lexical cohesive
devices in terms of general categories as discussed by Tárnyiková (2002), i.e.
‘lexical replacement’ and ‘lexical relationships’, which are closely intertwined
with naming strategies in crime reports.
All the crimes reported in the reports under investigation are high-profile
murder cases of very young children killed by a parent,
or murders of teenagers
who have been killed in a particularly violent and abhorrent way; as such they
have enormous potential as ‘human stories’, which seem to be replacing hard
news such as foreign news and political or investigative reporting in the modern
press (Franklin 2008). The victim and the killer(s) are thus central to the reports
since the events happened in real life to real people. From
the very beginning
the main participants are clearly identified not only as ‘
victim’ vs. ‘killer’, but
also as ‘good’ vs. ‘evil’, ‘innocent’ vs. ‘vicious’, ‘helpless’ vs. ‘sadistic, cruel’.
The participants are identified as individuals and at the same time via their
social roles, for example,
a mother/ father
vs.
a child
,
an altar boy
vs.
a school
dropout
, etc. These labels help to express the contrast between the participants
and also accentuate their positive and negative qualities, as well as to reinforce
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