Setting of story



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Matn tahlili 6


Task 6
We saw in Grammar Interlude #3 that speech is produced in tone units or idea units. These units are usually, but not always, one clause long. The information embraced within a single idea unit of speech is, of course, most often too small to handle all that the speaker wants to say. It is necessary usually to integrate several idea units into a larger block of information.
Speech is often organized into groups of idea units that I will call ‘‘stanzas.’’ Each stanza is a group of idea units about one important event, happening, or state of affairs at one time and place, or it focuses on a specific character, theme, image, topic, or perspective. When time, place, character, event, or perspective changes, we usually get a new stanza. I use this term (‘‘stanza’’) because these units are somewhat like stanzas in poetry.
Within a larger genre of language—like a narrative, a description, an explanation, an exposition—the stanzas are themselves often grouped into larger blocks of information that serve a role in the whole narrative, description, explanation, exposition, or whatever genre is being used.
Below, I lay out the idea units and stanzas in the opening of the story a seven-year-old African-American told in school during sharing time. Each numbered line is an idea unit:
SETTING OF STORY:
STANZA 1 (getting stuck):
1.â last yesterday
2.â when my father
3.â in the morning

4.â an’ he .â.â.


5.â there was a hook
6.â on the top of the stairway
7.â an’ my father was pickin me up
8.â an’ I got stuck on the hook
9.â up there

STANZA 2 (having breakfast):


10.â an’ I hadn’t had breakfast
1l.â he wouldn’t take me down
12.â until I finished all my breakfast
13.â cause I didn’t like oatmeal either

Note here how the first stanza is about getting stuck on the hook and the second is about having breakfast. The two together serve as the setting for the girl’s story, which we will see in a moment. These are two blocks of information.


Connected speech is like a set of boxes within boxes. The idea units, most of which are single clauses, are grouped together as one block of information. Then a single stanza, or (more often) two or more stanzas grouped together, can serve as a yet larger unit, like the setting for a story or an explanation within an argument.
Larger pieces of information, like a story about my summer vacation, an argument for higher taxes, or a description of a plan for redistributing wealth, have their own characteristic, higher-level organizations. That is, such large bodies of information have charac-teristic parts much like the body has parts (the face, trunk, hands, legs, etc.). These parts are the largest parts out of which the body or the information is composed. The setting of the child’s story we have been discussing is a piece of the larger organization of her story. It is a ‘‘body part’’ of her story.

Below, I reprint this child’s story as a whole. Each larger ‘‘body part’’ of the story is numbered with a Roman numeral and labeled in bold capitals (SETTING, CATALYST, CRISIS, EVALUATION, RESOLUTION, and CODA). In order to see the patterning in the little girl’s story all the more clearly, I do something a bit different below in the way I represent the numbered lines and stanzas. I remove from the girl’s story the various sorts of speech hesitations and dysfluencies that are part and parcel of all speech (and that tell us something about how planning is going on in the speaker’s head). I also place the little girl’s idea units back into clauses when they are not full clauses 20(save for ‘‘last yesterday’’ which is a temporal adverb with scope over most of the story). What I have produced here, then, is an idealized representation intended to make the structure of the girl’s story clearer. 20



PART I: SETTING
STANZA 1


  • 1.â Last yesterday in the morning




  • 2.â there was a hook on the top of the stairway




  • 3.â an’ my father was pickin’ me up




  • 4.â an’ I got stuck on the hook up there

STANZA 2



  • 5.â an’ I hadn’t had breakfast




  • 6.â he wouldn’t take me down




  • 7.â until I finished all my breakfast




  • 8.â cause I didn’t like oatmeal either

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