Prosodic Cues of Narrative Segmentation in Robert Frost’s ‘Mending Wall’: A Phono-Pragmatic Exploration

Authors

  • Manaar M. A. AL-Badri University of Baghdad
  • Nassier A. G. Al-Zubaidi University of Baghdad

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1301.09

Keywords:

narrative segmentation, pause, pitch reset, boundary tones, major paratones

Abstract

There is much research on the syntax-semantics and the syntax-phonology interaction. However, the exact relation between prosodic patterns and informational structure (as part of pragmatics) is still to be investigated. In this empirical study, we challenge the view that prosody and pragmatics are two autonomous levels of grammar. This paper is an analysis of the narrative poem ‘Mending Wall’ recited by Robert Frost to explore the prosodic features and the associated pragmatic meanings. It is proposed that a set of intentionally manipulated suprasegmental features form a prosodic grammar that works in line with syntax and lexical choices to build the narrative discourse and achieve pragmatic meanings. The paper shows that the amalgamation of certain prosodic features is manipulated to signal certain sections of the narrative and participate in segmenting the story into sections. Since the narrative structure is thought to be universal, we think that the procedures followed can be easily applied to other languages.

Author Biographies

Manaar M. A. AL-Badri, University of Baghdad

Department of English

Nassier A. G. Al-Zubaidi, University of Baghdad

Department of English

References

Byrd, D., Kaun, A., Narayanan, S., and Saltzman, E. (2000). “Phrasal signatures in articulation,” in Papers in Laboratory Phonology V. Acquisition and the Lexicon, edited by Broe M. B. and Pierrehumbert J. B., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,70–87

Byrd, D., & Saltzman, E. (1998). Intragestural dynamics of multiple prosodic boundaries. Journal of Phonetics, 26(2), 173- 199.

Ferré, G. (2005). “Gesture, intonation and the pragmatic structure of narratives in British English conversations,” in York Papers in Linguistics. York: Department of Language and Linguistic Science, eds Hicks, G., Walker, G. (Toronto, ON: University of York), 2(3), 55–90.

Halliday, M. A. (1970). A Course in Spoken English-Intonation: (by) MAK Halliday. Oxford University Press.

Labov, W. (1972). Sociolinguistic patterns (No. 4). University of Pennsylvania Press.

Labov, W. (1997). Some further steps in narrative analysis. Journal of Narrative & Life History, 7(1-4), 395–415.

Labov, W., & Waletzky, J. (1967). "Narrative Analysis: Oral Versions of Personal Experience”. Essays on the Verbal and Visual Arts, Seattle, 12, 44.

Ladd Jr, D. R. (1980). The structure of intonational meaning: Evidence from English. Indiana University Press.

Lehiste, I. (1960). “An Acoustic-Phonetic Study of Internal Open Juncture”, supplement to Phonetica, vol.5, 5-54

Samraj, B. (2014). 14. Move structure. In K. Schneider & A. Barron (Ed.), Pragmatics of Discourse (pp. 385-406). Berlin, München, Boston: De Gruyter Mouton.

Schiffrin, D. (1987). Discourse markers(No. 5). Cambridge University Press.

Swerts, M. (1997). Prosodic features at discourse boundaries of different strengths. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 101(1), 514-521.

Swerts, M., & Geluykens, R. (1994). Prosody as a marker of information flow in spoken discourse. Language and speech, 37(1), 21-43.

Toolan, M. J. (2001). Narrative: A critical linguistic introduction. Routledge.

von Heusinger, K. (1999). Intonation and Information Structure. Habilitationsschrift. University of Konstanz.

Wennerstrom, A. (2001). The music of everyday speech: Prosody and discourse analysis. Oxford University Press.

Wolfson, N. (2011). CHP: The conversational historical present in American English narrative (Vol. 1). Walter de Gruyter.

Downloads

Published

2022-12-31

Issue

Section

Articles