This document discusses the concepts of cohesion and coherence in analyzing texts. Cohesion refers to how different parts of a text are connected through grammatical and lexical elements like repetition and conjunctions. However, cohesion alone does not define a text, as sentences can be cohesive but nonsensical. Coherence considers how life experiences and social context contribute to making a text comprehensible. A text is defined by both cohesion between its linguistic elements and coherence in how those elements fit together based on outside knowledge. Discourse analysis aims to understand how texts are situated through both the resources that integrate parts of the text and relate it to its social context.
This document discusses the concepts of cohesion and coherence in analyzing texts. Cohesion refers to how different parts of a text are connected through grammatical and lexical elements like repetition and conjunctions. However, cohesion alone does not define a text, as sentences can be cohesive but nonsensical. Coherence considers how life experiences and social context contribute to making a text comprehensible. A text is defined by both cohesion between its linguistic elements and coherence in how those elements fit together based on outside knowledge. Discourse analysis aims to understand how texts are situated through both the resources that integrate parts of the text and relate it to its social context.
This document discusses the concepts of cohesion and coherence in analyzing texts. Cohesion refers to how different parts of a text are connected through grammatical and lexical elements like repetition and conjunctions. However, cohesion alone does not define a text, as sentences can be cohesive but nonsensical. Coherence considers how life experiences and social context contribute to making a text comprehensible. A text is defined by both cohesion between its linguistic elements and coherence in how those elements fit together based on outside knowledge. Discourse analysis aims to understand how texts are situated through both the resources that integrate parts of the text and relate it to its social context.
This document discusses the concepts of cohesion and coherence in analyzing texts. Cohesion refers to how different parts of a text are connected through grammatical and lexical elements like repetition and conjunctions. However, cohesion alone does not define a text, as sentences can be cohesive but nonsensical. Coherence considers how life experiences and social context contribute to making a text comprehensible. A text is defined by both cohesion between its linguistic elements and coherence in how those elements fit together based on outside knowledge. Discourse analysis aims to understand how texts are situated through both the resources that integrate parts of the text and relate it to its social context.
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 14
Discourse analysis
Cohesion and coherence in discourse
What counts as a text?
Example A One day her mother said to her, "Come, Little Red Riding Hood, take this piece of cake and bottle of wine and bring them to your grandmother. She's sick and weak, and this will strengthen her. Get an early start [] Example B And this will strengthen her. Take this piece of cake. One day her mother said to her. She's sick. The issue of textness Both examples A and B - a number of simple sentences; BUT we can intuitively interpret only example A as a text; Example B was compiled by randomly picking up lines from Little Red Riding Hood. ISSUE- how LARGE CHUNKS OF LANGUAGE come to be INTERPRETED AS TEXT Example A can be described in terms of cohesion. Cohesion is a type of relationship within a text when (the interpretation of) one element of discourse depends on another, i.e. the ways in which the components of the surface text (the actual words we hear or see) are mutually connected within a sequence
Cohesion Cohesion= a textuality standard
distinguishes a text from something, which is not a text. Two ways to establish cohesion in a text: Grammatical cohesion Lexical cohesion: the cohesive effect, achieved by the selection of vocabulary (repetition, synonymy, hyponymy (SUPERODINATE- SUBORDINATE), metonymy (PART-WHOLE), antonymy; collocation Lexical cohesion COMPLEMENTS grammatical cohesion Supplemented by REGISTER (circumstances of use) COHESION+REGISTER define TEXT Cohesive resources Halliday and Hasan (1976) the inventory of cohesive resources was organized as: (co-)reference (1d) Ellipsis (1f) Substitution (1e) Conjunction lexical cohesion TEXTNESS? We ended up going for a drink and then a meal in a Bernies Inn. Returned chez Jane for coffee and talk. Bed about midnight. - Cohesive markers? Haliday and Hasan: it is the underlying semantic relation ...that actually has the cohesive power But (H&H): textness = presence of cohesive markers Reference co-reference (Brown & Yule) forms that direct the hearer to look for their interpretation Enable the hearer to pick out the intended referent EXOPHORIC RELATIONS- interpretation lies OUTSIDE THE TEXT, Look at that. (that = ENDOPHORIC- lie within the text, FORM COHESIVE TIES: a) anaphoric- look back in text for interpretation Look at the sun. Its going down quickly b) cataphoric-look forward in text for interpretation Its going down quickly, the sun. The same types of relationships apply to other forms (HO ex 1.)
Coreferential chains Example 2 (HO) Co-referential chains: a) Lord Melbourne; Prime Minister -0-He-he-0 b) Victoria-Queen-Victoria-she c) Rooks- them-they- their
Chains of lexical collocation a) birdsong- woodlark-nightingale- blackbirds- rooks b) Birdsong- singing- cawing- calling
Substitution
H&H- support this SIMPLE VIEW, an expression can simply be replaced by another in discourse:
Wash and core six cooking apples. Put them in a fireproof dish.
- what is IMPORTANT are THE RELATIONS THE TEXT ESTABLISHES BETWEEN THE REFERENTS;
Haliday & Hasan- too simplistic (for discourse analysts) Concerned with linguistic resources available to the speaker/ writer to mark the cohesive relationship
Notion of cohesion- problems
Formal cohesion does not guarantee identification of a string as as a text Inadequacy of cohesive ties across sentences as a basis for textness Exercise 1
It is easy to make up a text full of cohesive devices which does not make any sense: Example My mom is 58 years old. 58 is an even number. Number four is unlucky in Chinese
Notion of cohesion- problems (cont.) Texts that do not have any cohesive devices but make perfect sense are also quite common: Example 2 A: It does not look like 140 students. B: Its Friday. Which theoretical constructs explain this?
Notion of cohesion- problems ILLUSION- WE COME TO THE MEANING OF A linguistic message only on the basis of the words and the ways they are structured: Syntactic well-formedness as a criterion? Compare: a) ( the first sentence of a novel): Within five minutes, or 10 minutes, no more than that, three of the others had called her on the telephone to ask her if she had heard that something had happened out there. (Tom Wolfe, the Right Stuff) b) Self Employed Upholsterer Free estimates. 332 5862 Coherence There must be some other factors besides cohesion devices that make connected texts meaningful coherence. Coherence does not exist in the language, it exists in people. People tend to interpret texts in accordance with their life experience,socio- cultural and discourse knowledge.
Summary
Cohesion is one part of the study of texture Texture considers the interaction of cohesion with other aspects of text organization. In this respect COHESION is the set of resources for constructing relations in discourse which transcend grammatical structure Texture, in turn, is one aspect of the study of coherence Coherence takes the social context of texture into consideration.
The goal of discourse analysis in this tradition is to BUILD A MODEL THAT PLACES TEXTS IN THEIR SOCIAL CONTEXTS AND LOOKS COMPREHENSIVELY AT THE RESOURCES WHICH BOTH INTEGRATE AND SITUATE THEM