Recommended lirerature



1. Арнольд И.В. Стилистика современного английского языка стр. 217-265I.R.

2. Galperin I.R. Stylistics pp. 191-246.

3. Кухаренко В.А. A Book of Practice in Stylistics. pp. 66-84.

4. Кухаренко В.А. Seminars in Style. pp. 63-85

 

 

Seminar 7

Lexico-syntactical stylistic devices (LSSD)

Questions and tasks

Task 1

Comment on linguistic properties of sentences which are foregrounded in lexico-syntactical stylistic devices (LSSD). Speak on antithesis, its structure, semantic and stylistic functions. Comment on the structure and stylistic functions of the following example of antithesis:

1.“Too brief for our passion, too long for our peace,

Were these hours – can their joy or their bitterness cease?” (Byron)

2. Mrs. Nork had a large home and a small husband. (S.L.)

3. He … ordered a bottle of the worst possible port wine, at the highest possible price. (D.)

4. It is safer to be married to the man you can be happy with than to the man you cannot be happy without. (E.)

5. In marriage the upkeep of woman is often the downfall of a man. (E.)

6. It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light,, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair; we had everything before us, we had nothing before us,we were all going direct to Heaven, we were all going direct the other way – in short the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only. (D.)

Give other examples of antitheses and comment on their stylistic functions.

Task 2

Speak about climax, its types: emotive, qualitative, quantitative and negative forms of climax, their structural organization. What is their stylistic function? Define the type of climax in the following passage:

1. “Little by little, bit by bit, and day by day, and year by year, the baron got the worst of some disputed question.” (Dickens)

2.” It must be a warm pursuit in such a climate”, observed Mr. Pickwick.

“Warm! – red hot! Scorching! – glowing!” (D.)

3. A storm’s coming up. A hurricane. A deluge. (Th.W.)

4. Of course it’s important. Incredibly, urgently, desperately important. (D.S.)

5. “I’ll smash you. I’ll crumble you, I’ll powder you. Go to the devil!” (D.)

6.”Be careful,” said Mr. Jingle – not a look”.

“Not a wink,” said Mr. Tupman.

“Not a syllable. – Not a whisper.” (D.)

7. He who only five months before had sought her so eagerly with his eyes and intriguing smile. The liar! The brute! The monster! (Dr.)

Task 3

What is anticlimax? Comment on its stylistic function. How is paradox created in the following example of anticlimax?

“They were absolutely quiet; eating no apples, cutting no names, inflicting no pinches, and making no grimaces, for full two minutes afterwards”. (Dickens)

Task 4

Speak about a simile, its semantic structure. Discuss different types of a simile (epic, disguised, trite, developed simile). What are the main functions of a simile in the following example?

“Milk-churns stand at Coronation Corner like short silver policemen. The town ripples like a lake in the waking breeze. Night in the four-ale, quiet as a domino”. (D.Thomas)

Task 5

What is litotes? Differentiate between litotes and understatement. Discuss most frequently used structures of litotes and its stylistic functions. Comment on the usage and stylistic functions of the following cases of litotes:

“…she was not unlike Morgiana in the ‘Forty Thieves’” (Dickens)

“And Captain Trevelyan was not overpleased about it” (Christie).

“A chiseled, ruddy face completed the not-unhandsome picture” (Pendleton)

Task 6

Speak about semantic types of periphrasis (logical, figurative, and euphemistic). What type is favoured in contemporary prose and why? What are the main stylistic functions of periphrasis in the following passages?

“I understand you are poor, and wish to earn money by nursing the little boy, my son, who has been so prematurely deprived of what can never be replaced” (Dickens)

Task 7

Read this folk-lore fairy-tale and say in which way the tail influences its length.

THE TAIL

J. F. Campbell

There was a shepherd who went out to the hill to look after his sheep. It was misty and cold, and he had much trouble to find them. At last he had them all but one; and after much searching he found that one too in a peat-hag, half drowned; so he took off his plaid, and bent down and took hold of the sheep’s tail, and he pulled! The sheep was heavy with water, and he could not lift her, so he took off his coat and he pulled! But it was too much for him, so he spit on his hands, and took a good hold of the tail and he PULLED! And the tail broke! And if it had not been for that this tale would have been a great deal longer.

Questions and tasks:

1. What type of gradation(s) does the tale present?

2. Does the gradation make itself explicit in the tale in any other way(s) than through the usage of graphical means?

3. What do the graphical stylistic devices (italicisation and capitalisation) highlight in the tale? Why are they used in this particular order?

4. Identify the elements of the structural division of a literary work in the tale, such as the exposition (or/and the narrative hook), the chain of events (also called complications), the climax and the denouement.

 

In fact, this story has two climaxes, because the word can be used in two senses: as a literary term it means culmination, the most exciting moment in the story, and, as a term naming a stylistic device, it is also known as gradation.

Task 8

Identify the types of gradation in the following excerpts from the novel by John Barth (The Floating Opera):

· Betty June told me all her troubles – and they were dramatic, real troubles! Woman had never loved man, it seemed to me, as she loved Smitty, and yet he ignored her. She wouldn’t have cared what he did to her – he might beat her and curse her (a thrilling notion to a seventeen-year-old!) – if only he’d acknowledged her devotion, but he ignored her. She would even suffered torture for him (together we dreamt up the tortures she’d be willing to suffer, considering each soberly); would even have died for him (we discussed, in detail, various unpleasant deaths) for the merest crumb of reciprocal passion. But Smitty remained oblivious.

· But alas, with Mr. Mack all other things weren’t equal. Not only did his physical well-being deteriorate in his last years, through arthritis to leukaemia to the grave; his sanity deteriorated also, gradually, along the continuum from relative normalcy through marked eccentricity to gibbering idiocy.

· If I was demoralized by Dad's death, I was paralyzed by the five thousand dollars and the note.

· I lived through 1920, through 1921, through 1922, through 1923. In the summers I lived on at the fraternity house and worked as stonemason, a brush salesman, a factory labourer, a lifeguard at one of the city pools, a tutor of history, even, and once actually a ditch digger. To my great surprise I was alive on the commencement day, if not entirely sober, and lived to walk off Gilman Terrace with my diploma – pale, weak, educated. I had lost twenty pounds, countless prejudices, much provincialism, my chastity (what had remained of it), and my religion.

· There have been other changes in my attitude during my life, but none altered my outward behaviour and manner as markedly as this one. I was uninvolved; I was unmoved; I was a saint.

Supplement

Read the beginning of the chapter A raison de coeur* from John Barth’s novel and comment on its title.


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