CHALLENGES OF DISCOURSE MODES CATEGORIZATION

Authors

Keywords:

text, discourse, register, genre, text type, mode of discourse

Abstract

With the current tendency to treat discourse phenomena as pragmatic rather than linguistic, the term “modes of discourse” has become an important concept in studying the organization of monological written discourse. However, there are some other linguistic terms which are closely related to, or sometimes even overlapping with, the concept of discourse modes, and this may lead to a problem of confusion. For this reason, the paper first of all elucidates the differences between discourse and text, register and genre, so that to point out the distinction between approaches to dealing with texts of various types. Next, it investigates diverse classifications of text types developed over the years by different authors (J. Kinneavy, E. Werlich, R. Longacre, D. Biber, J.-M. Adam, T. Virtanen, James R. Martin, M. Fludernik, C. Smith), indicating the key principles of categorization, such as correlation with cognitive strategies, speech acts, linguistic features, and so on. Finally, one arrives at the conclusion that modes of discourse, which could be used synonymously with text types, concern the pragmatic properties of the text, and reveal rhetorical patterns used to achieve certain communicative goals in a coherent discourse. It is thus the goal of further research in the field of discourse studies to come up with the typology of modes of discourse applicable for particular types of discourse.

References

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Cappelli, G. (2007). Sun, Sea, Sex and the Unspoilt Countryside: How the English language makes tourists out of readers. Italy: Pari Publishing.

Fludernik, M. (2000). Genres, Text Types, or Discourse Modes? Narrative Modalities and Generic Categorization. Style, 34 (2), 274-292.

Longacre, Robert E. (1996). The grammar of discourse. Springer Science & Business Media. Language Arts & Disciplines. 6. Martin, J. R. (1992). English text: system and structure. John Benjamin’s Publishing Company.

Smith, C. S. (2003). Modes of discourse. The local structure of texts. Cambridge University Press.

Trosborg, A. (1997). Text typology: register, genre, text type. Text Typology and Translation. Amsterdam: John Benjamin’s Publishing Company.

Wales, K. (2001). A dictionary of stylistics. Pearson Education Limited. UK: Harlow.

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Section

Philology