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TOPIC 3 ENGL 443 Speech Act Theory

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TOPIC 3: SPEECH ACT THEORY

Speech Act Theory

• It is a subfield of pragmatics concerned with the ways


in which words can be used not only to present
information but also to carry out actions. See speech
act.
• Speech-act theory, as introduced by Oxford
philosopher J.L. Austin (How to Do Things With Words,
1962) and further developed by American philosopher
J.R. Searle, considers the types of acts that utterances
can be said to perform:
• Locutionary Acts
• Illocutionary Acts
• Perlocutionary Acts
Illustrations
• In the past three decades, speech act theory
has become an important branch of the
contemporary theory of language thanks
mainly to the influence of [J.R.] Searle (1969,
1979) and [H.P.] Grice (1975) whose ideas on
meaning and communication have stimulated
research in philosophy and in human and
cognitive sciences
Illustrations
• From Searle's view, there are only five illocutionary points
that speakers can achieve on propositions in an utterance,
namely: the assertive, commissive, directive, declaratory
and expressive illocutionary points
• Speakers achieve the assertive point when they represent
how things are in the world, the commissive point when
they commit themselves to doing something, the directive
point when they make an attempt to get hearers to do
something, the declaratory point when they do things in
the world at the moment of the utterance solely by virtue
of saying that they do and the expressive point when they
express their attitudes about objects and facts of the world.
Illustrations
• This typology of possible illocutionary points
enabled Searle to improve Austin's
classification of performative verbs and to
proceed to a reasoned classification of
illocutionary forces of utterances which is not
as language-dependent as that of Austin."
(Daniel Vanderkeven and Susumu Kubo,
"Introduction." Essays in Speech Act Theory.
John Benjamins, 2002)
Locutionary Acts

• The act of making a meaningful utterance. Also known


as locution. The term locutionary act was introduced
by British philosopher John L. Austin in How to Do
Things With Words (1962).
• A locutionary act has to do with the simple act of a
speaker saying something, i.e. the act of producing a
meaningful linguistic expression. It consists of three
sub-acts. they are (i) a phonic act of producing an
utterance-inscription, (ii) a phatic act of composing a
particular linguistic expression in a particular language,
and (iii) a rhetic act of contextualizing the utterance-
inscription
Locutionary Acts
• The first of these three sub-acts is concerned
with the physical act of producing a certain
sequence of vocal sounds (in the case of a spoken
language), which is also called a phonetic act, or a
set of written symbols (in the case of a written
language).
• The second refers to the act of constructing a
well-formed string of sounds and/or symbols, be
it a word, phrase, sentence, or discourse, in a
particular language.
Locutionary Acts
• These two sub-acts are grouped by the
American philosopher John Searle as
performing an utterance act. The third sub-act
is responsible for tasks such as assigning
reference, resolving deixis, and
disambiguating the utterance-inscription. This
is referred to as a propositional act by Searle.
Locutionary Acts
• Thus, if John says to Mary, Pass me the
glasses, please, meaning 'Hand the glasses
over to me' with me referring to himself and
glasses to spectacles, he performs the
locutionary act of uttering the sentence Pass
me the glasses, please."
(Yan Huang, The Oxford Dictionary of
Pragmatics. Oxford University Press, 2012)
Illocutionary Acts

• It is a speaker's intention in delivering an


utterance.
• The terms illocutionary act and illocutionary
force were introduced by British linguistic
philosopher John L. Austin in How to Do
Things With Words (1962).
Illocutionary Act and Illocutionary
Force
• An illocutionary act refers to the type of
function a speaker intends to accomplish in
the course of producing an utterance. It is an
act accomplished in speaking and defined
within a system of social conventions.
• Thus, if John says to Mary Pass me the glasses,
please, he performs the illocutionary act of
requesting or ordering Mary to hand the
glasses over to him.
Illocutionary Act and Illocutionary
Force
• The functions or actions just mentioned are also
referred to as the illocutionary force or
illocutionary point of the speech act.
• The illocutionary force of a speech act is the
effect a speech act is intended to have by a
speaker. Indeed, the term 'speech act' in its
narrow sense is often taken to refer specifically to
illocutionary act."
(Yan Huang, The Oxford Dictionary of Pragmatics.
Oxford University Press, 2012)
Pragmatic Competence
• Achieving pragmatic competence involves the
ability to understand the illocutionary force of
an utterance, that is, what a speaker intends
by making it. This is particularly important in
cross-cultural encounters since the same form
(e.g. 'When are you leaving?') can vary in its
illocutionary force depending on the context
in which it is made (e.g. 'May I have a ride
with you?' or 'Don't you think it is time for you
to go?').
Pragmatic Competence
• (Sandra Lee McKay, Teaching English as an
International Language. Oxford Univ. Press, 2002)
What I Really Mean . . .
"When I say 'how are you' to a co-worker, I really
mean hello. Although I know what I mean by
'how are you,' it is possible that the receiver does
not know that I mean hello and actually proceeds
to give me a fifteen minute discourse on his
various maladies."
(George Ritzer, Sociology: A Multiple Paradigm
Science. Allyn & Bacon, 1980)
Perlocutionary Acts

• It is an action or state of mind brought about by, or as a


consequence of, saying something.
• Intuitively, a perlocutionary act is an act performed by
saying something, and not in saying something. Persuading
• angering, inciting, comforting and inspiring are often
perlocutionary acts; but they would never begin an answer
to the question 'What did he say?' Perlocutionary acts, in
contrast with locutionary and illocutionary acts, which are
governed by conventions, are not conventional but natural
acts (Austin (1955), p. 121). Persuading, angering, inciting,
etc. cause physiological changes in the audience, either in
their states or behavior; conventional acts do not."
(Aloysius Martinich, Communication and Reference. Walter
de Gruyter, 1984)
Perlocutionary Acts
• In the perlocutionary instance, an act is
perfomed by saying something. For example, if
someone shouts 'fire' and by that act causes
people to exit a building which they believe to be
on fire, they have performed the perlocutionary
act of convincing other people to exit the
building.
• In another example, if a jury foreperson declares
'guilty' in a courtroom in which an accused
person sits, the illocutionary act of declaring a
person guilty of a crime has been undertaken.
Perlocutionary Acts
• The perlocutionary act related to that illocution is
that, in reasonable circumstances, the accused
person would be convinced that they were to be
led from the courtroom into a jail cell.
• Perlocutionary acts are acts intrinsically related to
the illocutionary act which precedes them, but
discrete and able to be differentiated from the
illocutionary act."
(Katharine Gelber, Speaking Back: The Free
Speech Versus Hate Speech Debate. John
Benjamins, 2002)

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