On the What, Why and How of Generic Taxonomy
Introduction to a special issue of Poetics on genre, which I edited. The issue contains contributions by Bernard Rollin, Robert Champigny, Mary Louise Pratt, Susan Tripp, Paul Hernadi, Michael Hancher, Martin Steinmann, Thomas Pavel, and Gary Olson.
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When Je is Un Autre: Fiction, Quotation, and the Performative Analysis
In 1970, the linguist John Ross took a step toward the reconciliation of generative grammar and speech act theory by suggesting that the deep structure of every sentence should be prefixed by a performative clause of the type "I speech act to you that P," where P stands for the sentence. This proposal is known as the "performative analysis." It presupposes that all instances of the first and second person pronoun in the sentence will be co-referential with the I and You of the performative prefix. In this paper I examine three types of utterances where this co-referentiality is broken, and I propose appropriate amendments to the performative analysis. These types are fiction, direct quote, and metalinguistic statements ("I should be capitalized"). The paper also discusses the contrast between direct, indirect and free indirect discourse, focusing on the problem of assigning an adequate semantic deep structure to free indirect discourse.
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