Evidentiality and illocution
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Marina Sbisà
Marina Sbisà is Professor of Philosophy of Language at the University of Trieste, Italy. She has done research in the philosophy of language, semiotics, discourse analysis and gender studies, with particular attention to pragmatic issues such as speech acts, presupposition, implicature, and context. She collaborated on the revised edition of J.L. Austin, How to Do Things with Words (1975) and is the author of many publications in Italian and English.
Abstract
This paper attempts to show that the linguistic or discursive marking of evidentiality plays a role in the performance of illocutionary acts and that its closeness to, and difference from, the attribution of epistemic modality can be explained in the light of an analysis of their respective relations to illocution. A newspaper article, displaying lexical and textual features pertinent to both evidentiality and epistemic modality, is analysed in a speech-act oriented manner, paying attention to the participation framework and its polyphonicity, in order to collect live material for the discussion of theoretical distinctions and relations. Evidentiality is then described as related to the preparatory conditions for illocutionary acts, assertive ones in particular, while epistemic modalisation appears to serve mainly the function of mitigating or boosting the speaker's commitment to the truth of the assumption she expresses or reports.
About the author
Marina Sbisà is Professor of Philosophy of Language at the University of Trieste, Italy. She has done research in the philosophy of language, semiotics, discourse analysis and gender studies, with particular attention to pragmatic issues such as speech acts, presupposition, implicature, and context. She collaborated on the revised edition of J.L. Austin, How to Do Things with Words (1975) and is the author of many publications in Italian and English.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Evidentiality in discourse
- Foregrounding evidentiality in (English) academic discourse: Patterned co-occurrences of the sensory perception verbs seem and appear
- Constructing evidence at Prime Minister's Question Time: An analysis of the grammar, semantics and pragmatics of the verb see
- Evidential embellishment in political debates during US campaigns
- Evidentiality, intersubjectivity and salience in Spanish and Catalan markers claro/clar and la verdad/veritat
- Evidentials in entextualization
- Evidentiality and illocution
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Evidentiality in discourse
- Foregrounding evidentiality in (English) academic discourse: Patterned co-occurrences of the sensory perception verbs seem and appear
- Constructing evidence at Prime Minister's Question Time: An analysis of the grammar, semantics and pragmatics of the verb see
- Evidential embellishment in political debates during US campaigns
- Evidentiality, intersubjectivity and salience in Spanish and Catalan markers claro/clar and la verdad/veritat
- Evidentials in entextualization
- Evidentiality and illocution