Functional Stylistics of The Modern English Language
Functional Stylistics of The Modern English Language
Plan:
1. General Notes on Style and Stylistics
2. The Problem of Style as Functional Category
3. The Notion of Stylistic Features
4. Style as a Historical Category.
5. The Classification of Functional Styles and the Debatable Problems of
functional Stylistic.
1. General Notes on Style and Stylistics
The subject of stylistics has so far not been definitely outlined. According
to several major linguists it can be roughly outlined as the study of the nature,
functions and structure of stylistic devices, on the one hand, and, on the other, the
study of each style of language as classified, its aim, its structure, its characteristic
features and the effect it produces, as well as its interrelation with other styles of
language.
There is a confusion between the terms style and stylistics. The first
concept is so broad that it is hardly possible to regard it as a term. We speak of
style in architecture, literature, behavior, linguistics, dress and other fields of
human activity
Even in linguistics, the word style is used so widely that it needs
interpretation. The majority of linguists who deal with the subject of style agree
that the term applies to the following fields of investigation:
1) The aesthetic function of language;
2) Expressive means in language;
3) Synonymous ways of rendering the same idea;
4) Emotional colouring of language;
5) A system of special devices called stylistic devices;
6) The splitting of the literary language into separate subsystems called
stylistic devices;
7) The interrelation between language and thought;
8) The individual manner of an author in making use of language.
The word “function” is now used in various senses, but its original
mathematical meaning is “a relation between two different sets of elements
connected by a rule which assigns to each member of the first set an
INDEPENDENT VARIABLE and to the second set of elements a DEPENDENT
VARIABLE. Example: Y = f(X), where “Y” is the DEPENDENT VARIABLE or
FUNCTION of “X” (the INDEPENDENT VARIABLE), and a change in the
value of “X” produces a change in the value of “Y”.
In stylistic investigations the non-verbal situation (Что такое
«невербальная ситуация»?) or non-verbal (extralinguistic) context is typically
the independent variable, and the linguistic features (style markers) the dependent
variable. (?) In the broader sense, the word “function” is used to mean
“destination of an element in an artificial system or a destination of the whole
system in its medium (окружающая среда)”. If the language is viewed as a
system of interconnected elements, then we may say that each of the elements has
its specific function in relation to the elements of a higher level where it is
included (=integrated). In relation to functional styles, the higher system is the
system of language in general. Consequently, functional style may primarily be
defined as a certain subsystem of language. This subsystem of interrelated
language means serves a definite aim in communication.
Functional Styles (FS) are by no way concrete texts. They are abstract
categories, which unite texts into Functional-stylistic paradigms. This can be
proved by the fact that the same idea can be presented in various Functional-
stylistic forms:
“I say, Owl”, said Christopher Robin “isn’t this fun?”
“The atmospheric conditions have been very unfavourable lately”, said
Owl.
“The what?”
“It has been raining”, explained Owl.
“Yes”, said Christopher Robin, “It has”.
“The flood-level has reached an unprecedented height”.
“The who?” “There’s a lot of water about”, explained Owl. (A. Miln)
Here the difference between the bookish and colloquial speech, which is
certainly a stylistic difference, is clearly felt by the speakers/listeners.
Being an abstraction, FS as a category or as a member of paradigmatic
field, is correlated in the speaker’s mind with the other FSs, which a person has
mastered in the process of his or her communicative activity. Consequently, FS
classification is based on the logical principle of oppositions. That is why it is
impossible, even theoretically, to assume that there may exist a language
represented by only one FS.
Each FS has its own specific markers, but the marker that holds a FS
together and that is essential to it, is its function in communication, that is why
FSs are referred to as “functional”. Thus, the newspaper style has the function of
public opinion formation, the belletristic style has the function of aesthetic
cognition, and the scientific style has the function of exchanging some specific
information and cognition (познание) by concept.
Within each categorical class of FSs, there may be subdivisions
(subparadigms) or even hyperdivision (hyperparadigms or “megastyles”).