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Politeness Theory Brown & Levinson (1987). Cheryl Holden. Introduction. Where does this theory fit into linguistics? Who are Brown & Levinson? B&L’s objectives So, what’s the theory? How does it work? Is it bomb-proof?. Where does this theory fit into linguistics?. Linguistics
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Politeness TheoryBrown & Levinson (1987) Cheryl Holden
Introduction • Where does this theory fit into linguistics? • Who are Brown & Levinson? • B&L’s objectives • So, what’s the theory? • How does it work? • Is it bomb-proof?
Where does this theory fit into linguistics? • Linguistics > pragmatics / interactional sociolinguistics > politeness / facework • Brown & Levinson < Erving Goffman(1922-1982) <<< Émile Durkheim (1858-1917)
Who are Brown & Levinson? • Penny Brown and Stephen Levinson • Worked with ‘situated conversational exchanges‘. • Theirs remains one of the most prominent works in this domain.
B&L’s objectives • To examine the assumptions and reasoning used by participants. • Account for cross-cultural similarities in the abstract principles behind polite usage. • To draw up a formal model to account for cross-cultural similarities that also worked for culturally-specific use.
So, what’s the theory? (1) • All parties have positive face and negative face and are rational agents, and so will choose means that satisfy their ends. • If the satisfaction of face wants relies on the actions of others, it is generally in the interests of both parties to maintain each other’s face. • Some actions (or FTAs) are inherently threatening to face.
So, what’s the theory? (2) • A speaker (S) will therefore want to maintain the face of his hearer (H) ... unless S’s desire to perform the FTA outweighs his need to respect H’s face. • Given the above, the more that face is threatened, the more S will want to use a strategy that minimizes risk. • Since these strategies are known to both parties, they will not use a less risky strategy than necessary, lest this be perceived as indicating that the FTA is more threatening that is really the case.
Calculating the seriousness of an FTA • Wx = D(S,H) + P(H,S) + Rx
Is it bomb-proof? • Criticisms that it’s too west-centric. • Even within Europe, politeness is not universal. - turn-taking (France) - thanking (Spain) • Values of D, P and R not fixed, but can change according to context. • Other factors – such as prosody – can prompt perceptions of difference in politeness.