Persuasive farce. Dialogical pragmatics in the novels of P.G. Wodehouse
Abstract
Abstract – This paper explores persuasion, as a speech act, in the novels of the English comic writer P.G. Wodehouse. Persuasion, as a topic for enquiry within linguistics, has been extensively studied, in a variety of social contexts (e.g. Sandell 1977; Jowett and O’Donnell 1992; Messaris 1997; Nash 1989; Hyland 1998; Halmari and Virtanen 2005; Charteris-Black 2006; Tardy 2011). All these studies are either general accounts of persuasion, or else describe its presence as a pragmatic focus in a specific social context, invoking diverse (pragma)-linguistic features to explain its operation. What seems, as yet, relatively under-explored, is its operation in everyday conversational interaction, and this paper represents a move in this direction, though the distinction between authentic and literary data is recognised. It uses an analytical methodology based on Speech Act Theory (Austin 1962; Searle 1969) and Dialogical Pragmatics (Kecskes 2016) to explore instances in the novels in which Bertie Wooster, Wodehouse’s principal character, is persuaded to do various things. What emerges, although not a picture of authentic verbal persuasion as it would occur in actual interaction, but a facsimile that may shed light on some of the discursive processes involved. It is suggested, in fact that, at the level of pragmatics, the processes involved in authentic and literary speech acts are not as different as they are sometimes taken to be.
References
Aristotle 1954, Rhetoric, transl. by Roberts W. R. and Bywater I, Random House, New York.
Austin J. 1962, How to do things with words, Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
Bach K. 2007, Regressions in pragmatics (and semantics), in Burton-Roberts N. (ed.), Pragmatics (Advances in Linguistics), Palgrave-Macmillan, Basingstoke, pp. 24-44.
Biber D., Connor U. and Upton T.A. 2007, Discourse on the move. Using corpus analysis to describe discourse structure, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.
Biber D. 2009, Foreword, in Quaglio P., Television dialogue: The sitcom Friends vs. natural conversation, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.
Boswell J. 1992, The life of Samuel Johnson, Campbell, London.
Bucholtz M. and Hall K. 2005, Identity and interaction: a sociocultural linguistic approach, in “Discourse Studies” 7 [4-5], pp. 585-614.
Bülow-Møller A.M. 2005, Persuasion in business negotiations, in Halmari H. and Virtanen T. (eds.), Persuasion across genres: a linguistic approach, John Benjamins, London.
Cap P. 2013, Proximization: The pragmatics of symbolic distance crossing, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.
Charteris-Black J. 2006, Politicians and rhetoric: the persuasive power of metaphor, Palgrave-MacMillan, Basingstoke/ New York.
Chilton P. 2004, Analyzing political discourse: theory and practise, Routledge, London/ New York.
Cialdini R.B. 2001, Influence: Science and practice, Pearson, Boston.
Culpeper J. and Ravassat M. (eds.) 2011, Stylistics and Shakespeare’s language: transdisciplinary approaches, Continuum, London.
Damer T.E. 2005, Attacking faulty reasoning: a practical guide to fallacy-free arguments, Wadsworth, Belmont.
Dean J.F. 1982, Joe Orton and the redefinition of farce, in “Theatre Journal” 34 [4], pp. 481-492.
Ermida I. 2008, The language of comic narratives: Humor construction in short stories, de Gruyter, Berlin/New York.
Forchini P. 2012, Movie language revisited: evidence from multi-dimensional analysis and corpora, Peter Lang, Bern.
Galligan E.L. 1985, P.G. Wodehouse master of farce, in “The Sewanee Review” 93 [4], pp. 609-617.
Gathorne-Hardy J. 1978, The old school tie: the phenomenom of the English public school, Viking, New York.
Gurak L.J. 1999, The promise and the peril of social action in Cyberspace: Ethos, delivery, and the protests over MarketPlace and the Clipper chip, in Smith M.A. and Kollock P. (eds.), Communities in cyberspace, Routledge, London/ New York, pp. 241-263.
Halliday M.A.K. 1971, Linguistic function and literary style: an enquiry into the language of William Golding’s ‘The Inheritors’, in Chatman S. (ed.), Literary style: a symposium, Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 330-368.
Halmari H. and Virtanen T. (eds.) 2005, Persuasion across genres: a linguistic approach, John Benjamins, London.
Hardin K.J. 2010, Trying to persuade: speech acts in the persuasive discourse of intermediate Spanish learners, in McElhanon K.A. and Ger Reesink A. (eds.), Mosaic of languages and cultures, SIL E-books, pp. 155-179.
Hyland K. 1998, Persuasion and context: the pragmatics of academic metadiscourse, in “Journal of Pragmatics” XXX [4], pp. 437–55.
Jakobson R. 1960, Linguistics and poetics, in Sebok T. (ed.), Style in Language, M.I.T. Press, Cambridge, MA, pp. 350-377.
Jowett G.S. and O’Donnell, V. 1992, Propaganda and persuasion, Sage, Newbury Park, CA.
Jucker A.H. 1997, Persuasion by inference: Analysis of a party political broadcast, in Blommaert J. and Bulcaen C. (eds.), Political linguistics, John Benjamins, Amsterdam, pp. 121-137.
Kecskes I. 2014, Intercultural pragmatics, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Kecskes I. 2016, A dialogic approach to pragmatics, in “Russian Journal of Linguistics” 20 [4], pp. 26-42.
Lakoff R. 1982, Persuasive discourse and ordinary conversation, with examples from advertising, in Tannen D. (ed.), Analyzing discourse: text and talk, Georgetown University Press, Washington DC, pp. 25-42.
Leech G. and Short M. 2007, Style in fiction: a linguistic introduction to English fictional prose, Longman, Harlow.
Lehmann C. 2004, Data in linguistics, in “The Linguistic Review” 21 [3/4], pp. 275-310.
Levinson S.C. 1983, Pragmatics, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Messaris P. 1997, Visual persuasion: the role of images in advertising, Sage, Thousand Oaks, CA.
Nash W. 1989, Rhetoric. The wit of persuasion, Blackwell, Oxford.
Nicoll A. 1962, The theatre and dramatic theory, Barnes and Noble, New York.
Oakes P.J., Haslam A. and Turner J.C. 1994, Stereotyping and social reality, Blackwell, Oxford.
Oswald S. 2014, It is easy to miss something you are not looking for: a pragmatic account of covert communicative influence for (Critical) Discourse Analysis, in Hart C. and Cap P. (eds.), Contemporary critical discourse studies, Bloomsbury, London/New Delhi/ New York, pp. 97-121.
Palmer J. 1994, Taking humor seriously, Routledge, London/New York.
Partington A. 2008, From Wodehouse to the White House: A corpus-assisted study of play, fantasy and dramatic incongruity in comic writing and laughter-talk, in “Lodz Papers in Pragmatics” 4 [2], pp. 189-213.
Partington A. 2010, Comic techniques in the prose of P.G. Wodehouse, in The Character Unbound, Biblioteca Aretina, Arezzo, pp. 241-256.
Potts L.J. 1948, Comedy, Hutchinson, London.
Quaglio P. 2009, Television dialogue: The sitcom Friends vs. natural conversation, John Benjamins, Amsterdam.
Rey J.M. 2001, Changing gender roles in popular culture: Dialogue in Star Trek episodes from 1966 to 1993, in Conrad S. and Biber D. (eds.), Variation in English: Multi-dimensional studies, Longman, London, pp. 138-155.
Sacks H., Schegloff E. and Jefferson G. 1974, A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking for conversation, in “Language” 50, pp. 696-735.
Schegloff E. 1992, Introduction, in Sacks H., Lectures on conversation – Vol.1: Fall 1964-Spring 1968, Blackwell, Oxford, pp. ix-lxii.
Sandell R. 1977, Linguistic style and persuasion, Academic Press, London.
Searle J.R. 1969, Speech acts: an essay in the philosophy of language, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Smith L. 1989, Modern British farce: A selective study of British farce from Pinero to the present day, Basingstoke, Macmillan.
Tardy C.M. 2011, Persuasion in the high-stakes world of grant funding: a sample genre analysis, In Hyland K. and Paltridge B. (eds.), Bloomsbury companion to discourse analysis, Continuum, London, pp. 61-67.
Toulmin S. 1958, The uses of argument, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Urbanová L. 2005, English conversation: authentic and fictional, in “Theory and Practice in English Studies” 3, pp. 155-162.
Watzlawick P., Helmick Beavin J. and Jackson D.D. 1967, Pragmatics of human communication: a study of interactional patterns, pathologies and paradoxes, Norton, New York.
Wodehouse P.G. 1981, The Inimitable Jeeves, Penguin Books, New York.
Wodehouse P.G. 1989, The Jeeves Omnibus, Vol. 1, Hutchinson, London.
Wodehouse P.G. 2011, The Code of the Woosters (1938), Norton, W.W. and company, New York.
Full Text: pdf
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.