Structural Linguistics
Structural Linguistics
Structural Linguistics
linguistics
Dr LE BI Le Patrice, OCT
Canada-Ontario Certified Teacher of English and French
• ‘’When philology dealt with linguistic questions, it was for the express
purpose of comparing texts of different periods, determining the
language peculiar to each author, or deciphering and explaining
inscriptions made in an archaic or obscure language. […] but
philological criticism is still deficient on one point: it follows the written
language too slavishly and neglects the living language. Moreover, it is
concerned with little except Greek and Latin antiquity.’’
Comparative philology
• In the 19th century, Franz Bopp realized that the comparison of
related languages could become the subject matter of an
independent science.
• Langue is ‘’both a social product of the faculty of speech and a collection of necessary conventions
that have been adopted by a social body to permit individual to exercise that faculty.
• […]Language (= langue) is a convention, and the nature of the sign that is agreed upon does not
matter.
• In separating Langue from Parole, Saussure differentiated what is SOCIAL from what is
INDIVIDUAL, what is essential from what is accessory and more or less accidental.
Nature of the linguistic sign:
sign, signifier and signified
•The linguistic sign unites, not a thing and a
name, but a CONCEPT and a SOUND-
IMAGE. The linguistic sign is then a TWO-
SIDED PSYCHOLOGICAL ENTITY that can
be represented by the drawing on the next
slide. However, it is to be kept in mind that
the two elements of the linguistic sign are
intimately united, and each recalls the other.
Nature of the linguistic sign:
sign, signifier and signified
CONCEPT
•
SOUND-IMAGE
Nature of the linguistic sign:
sign, signifier and signified
• Vilém Mathesius, the founder of the Prague School drew a lot on early
linguistic studies by various authors, and especially on Karl Bühler’s
psychological theory. Vilém Mathesius’s approach to language study
was primarily termed ‘’FUNCTIONAL SENTENCE PERSPECTIVE
(FSP). (Newmeyer, 2001: 2) (Journal of Linguistics, Vol. 37, issue 01
March 2001, pp. 101-126)
about the founding of the
prague school of linguistics
• The name Prague School has not been given to the Prague linguists by
themselves. The term Prague School was first used in a prospectus in which
Dutch phoneticians invited the linguists of Prague Linguistic Circle to an
International Congress of Phonetics to be held in Amsterdam in 1932. Thus,
the Prague Linguistic Circle was founded by Vilém Mathesius (then lecturer
at the Prague University Department of English) together with other
scholars among whom could be named Roman Jakobson, Bohumil
Havránek, etc.
• Those founding members were later joined by foreign scholars like Nikolaj
Sergeevič Trubetzkoy, Boris Tomaševskij and French scholars like Léon
Brun and Lucien Tesnière.
Creation of the international
phonological association (ipa)
• The International Phonological Association was
chaired by Nikolaj Trubetzkoj. Thus, the Prague
Linguistic Circle can be credited with the creation of
the IPA whose task was the phonological description
of the greatest possible number of the languages of the
world. The principles of that description were outlined
in the fourth volume of the series of papers published
by the Circle called Travaux du Circle Linguistique de
Prague.
Epistemological context of te
Prague Linguistic Theory
• The theoretical reflections of the Prague Linguistic Circle,
under the leadership of Mathesius, emerged at a time when
‘’the main competing currents had existed side by side in the
world linguistics’’ (Prague Linguistic Circle Papers, Vol. 4,
page 12, Josef Vachek, John Benjamins Publishing, 2002,
Amsterdam/Philadephia).
• The first trend, genetically comparative, culminated in the
Neo-grammarian School while the second current was
analytically comparative.
CHARATERISTICS OF EACH
TREND
• The first trend elaborated an exact scientific method but it
lacked a sense for the structural patterning of languages and
for the synchronic study. In other words it was rather oriented
toward diachronic studies of languages.
• The second trend was geared toward synchronic study of the
features of languages, but it failed to produce scientific
methods which could guarantee exactness and scientific
accuracy.
FUNCTIONAL SENTENCE PERSPECTIVE
(FSP) BY VILÉM MATHESIUS
• ‘’The principal elements of the Functional Sentence Perspective are the base of
the utterance (THEME), i.e what is known or at least obvious in the given
situation and from which the speaker departs, and the nucleus of the utterance
(RHEME), i.e what the speaker says about the base or with respect to the base.’’
(Dictionary of the Prague School of Linguistics, 1984, p. 48.);
• Therefore, the rheme of a sentence is ‘’the core (focus) of an utterance from the
point of view of Functional Sentence Perspective.’’ (Dictionary of the Prague
School of Linguistics, 1984, p. 141.)
• As for the Theme of a sentence, it is ‘’the basis (starting point) of an utterance
from the point of view of Functional Sentence Perspective.’’ (Dictionary of the
Prague School of Linguistics, 1984, p. 157.)
SEMANTIC SENTENCE PATTERN (SSP)
BY FRANTIŠEK DANEŠ
• Daneš does not see the need to make more than the
simple Theme-Rheme division in the sentence. His
position on theme identification, however, is less clear.
In his writings on thematic progression, for example,
his schematic representations portray consistently a
movement from theme to rheme (T R), but never the
other way round (R T).
FRANTIŠEK DANEŠ AND THEMATIC
PROGRESSION
What is more well-known about Daneš in the area of
textlinguistics are his views on THEMATIC
PROGRESSION (TP). The main TP types according to
Danes are the following:
• Simple Linear TP,
• Continuous or Constant TP,
• TP with derived themes.
COMMUNICATIVE DYNAMISM (CD) BY
JAN FIRBAS
• The Prague School developed a theory of ‘’Functional Syntax’’ in
which different levels of structure were distinguished. Mathesius
started from the distinction between the sentence as a grammatical
(and semantic) structure and the actual use of this structure, its
functioning, in an act of speech in the capacity of an utterance
(enunciation, message, communication). In his study of the utterance,
Mathesius put its organization in terms of the communicative effect
intended by the speaker high on the agenda of functional linguistics. ()
COMMUNICATIVE DYNAMISM (CD) BY
JAN FIRBAS
• According to Daneš, Mathesius set out the two main dimensions
involved in the organization of the utterance as a message. Firstly, the
utterance divides into the theme, what the speaker is talking about, and
the rheme, the enunciation proper.
• In the second place, the utterance is organized into information that is
presumed known to the hearer and information that is new to the
hearer.
• To refer to this level of structure, Mathesius coined a term for which
Vachek suggested the English equivalent Functional Sentence
Perspective (FSP).
COMMUNICATIVE DYNAMISM (CD) BY
JAN FIRBAS
• However, Firbas notes that the translation provided by Vachek lacks
the idea of ‘current, on-going’ which is present in the original term
suggested by Mathesius which actually refers to the perspectivizing
choices made in the ‘currently going’ utterance. It is this element that
Firbas foregrounds with his concept of Communicative Dynamism.
• Firbas became the Prague School’s leading scholar in the development
of a cross-linguistically applicable model for analyzing
Communicative Dynamism (CD).
• Firbas sees the sentence as a field of meaningful syntactic relations,
which is made operative when it is converted into a contextualized
utterance.
COMMUNICATIVE DYNAMISM (CD) BY
JAN FIRBAS
Phonology
Glossematics
Expression-Form Content-Form
• Cenematics Plerematics
• Cenemes Elements: Pleremes
ABOUT THE OBJECT OF
GLOSSEMATICS
•Both the Expression-Form and the
Content-Form manifest themselves in a
‘’substance’’. But the Glossematic
concept of substance is different from
what is normally understood by
substance in general Linguistics.
BASIC CONCEPTS AND THEORETICAL
CONSIDERATIONS IN GLOSSEMATICS :
the Autonomy of language
• For Hjelmslev, ‘’to create a true linguistics, language should be
studies not as a conglomerate of non-linguistic phenomena, but as a
self-sufficient totality, a structure sui generis. This not only be the sole
true method of synchronic linguistics, it would also be the only way to
establish a real and rational diachronic linguistics: the theory of such
a linguistics could provide a uniform basis of comparison between
languages, by forming concepts which would no longer be applicable
only to certains regions of language, to certain particular languages
or groups of languages, but to all. ’’ (Siertsema, 1965: 30)
BASIC CONCEPTS AND THEORETICAL
CONSIDERATIONS IN GLOSSEMATICS :
linguistic theory and empiricism
• For Hjelmslev, ‘’Every theory must answer the requirement of
empiricism: the theory must be capable of yielding, in all its
applicatons, results that agree with experimental data. It will do so,
says Hjelmslev, if it satisfies the following three requirements, give
here in the order of their relative importance:
• * The theoretical description must be free from contradiction (self-
consistent).
• * It must be exhaustive.
• * It must be as simple as possible. […] Together with these three
requirements form what Hjelmslev calls the empirical principle.’’
(Siertsema, 1965: 37)
BASIC CONCEPTS AND THEORETICAL
CONSIDERATIONS IN GLOSSEMATICS :
linguistic theory and empiricism
• Three meanings are attached to the word empiricism by
Hjelmslev,
• * ‘’Observation of the facts of language, immanent study.
• * Observation of the functions in language.
• * Fulfilment of the three requirements of self-consistency,
exhaustiveness and simplicity. […]
• Hjelmslev means to say that the three requirements mentioned
there can only be satisfied by an empirical method of observation
of the fact of language. ’’ (Siertsema, 1965: 38-39)
UNIT # 5: the american school of
structural linguistics:
distributionalism
• The name of two prominent figures of the American School of
Structural Linguistics is associated with the concept of
DISTRIBUTIONALISM. Those linguists are Leonard Bloomfield and
Zellig Harris.
• The advent of distributionalism was triggered by the discovery of the
existence of about 150 language families on the American continent,
that is, more than 1,000 languages.
• Those languages were not codified or documented. They were in the
form of oral data.
Distributionalism and principles of
structural analysis
• Distributionalism was initiated by Bloomfield, and it is based
on the study of the distribution of linguistic units.
• The objective of distributionalism consists in mechanically
applying to the analysis of the English language the
techniques used to study the indigenous languages of
American or Indian American languages.
• Distributional linguistics excludes the study of meaning.
Distributionalism: Characteristics
of its method of investigation
• 1. Combinations and Hierarchy
• The structural theory perceives the utterance as a combination of
elements;
• Language is therefore viewed a series of hierarchical levels:
• - phonological,
• - morphological,
• - sentential.
• 2. The Principle of Immanence
• An immanent research is based on the internal elements of
language. It does not resort to the extra-linguistic.
Distributionalism: its method of
investigation
• 1. The Corpus
• Within the framework of distributionalism, linguists noticed
that the indigenous languages of American were not codified.
In addition, they did not know them nor could they speak
them. Thus, to study them they needed to start by the
observation of a corpus which is considered as a
representative sample of the languages to be studied.
• The corpus is constructed by collecting data from the speech
of native speakers of the languages under study
Distributionalism: its method of
investigation
• 1. The Corpus
• The corpus is a complex set of linear utterances broken up into
different smaller units at different levels of organization:
• - Phonological Level,
• - Morphological Level,
• - Sentence Level.
• The analysis based on the corpus excludes any reference to the
meaning.
• That way of analyzing utterances is referred to as the Immediate
Constituents Analysis.
PRE-CONCLUSION TO
DISTRIBUTIONALISM
• Distributional linguistic is viewed as an empirical and
inductive approach to the analysis of languages. It helps build
distributional classes with a view to generalizing the findings
of the research.
• However, by excluding meaning in the analysis of languages,
distributional linguistics is viewed as a taxonomic approach
which seems limits to grasp the whole fabric of human
language.
OTHER STRUCTURALIST-LIKE
THEORIES
• Gustave Guillaume’s Psycholinguistics (of language),
• Lucien Tesnière’s Structural Syntax,
• The School of London (Daniel Jones, John Firth, M.A.K
Halliday.
conclusion
• In conclusion, it can be kept in mind that structural linguistics is
considered as the birth of Modern Linguistics, that is the scientific
study of human language. However, it would be a mistake to look
down upon the pre-linguistic reflections on human language and view
them as non-scientific investigations on human language. For, it is
understood that Modern linguistics started with Structural Linguistics,
yet, the theoretical reflections on human language started well before
the theoretical thoughts developed by De Saussure and his students
who wrote the post-humous Course in General Linguistics (Cours de
Linguistique Générale), that is, the birth certificate of Modern
Linguistics.
The end …
… was a pleasure …