
English Tense and Aspect in Halliday's Systemic Functional Grammar
A Critical Appraisal and an Alternative
Carl Bache(Author)
Equinox Publishing Ltd
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 1. January 2009
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-1-84553-351-9 (ISBN)
Description
This book is aimed at fellow practitioners and researchers in functional linguistics. It offers a friendly but critical appraisal of a major component of the 'standard' version of SFL, i.e. the account given by Halliday and Matthiessen of tense and aspect in English. Supporting his criticisms with evidence from a project in corpus linguistics, Bache suggests that this account fails in several ways to satisfy accepted functionalist criteria, and hence needs revising and extending. After surveying alternative functionalist approaches to modeling time and tense in English (including Fawcett's Cardiff school approach and Harder's instructional-semantic approach), and after presenting a number of principles of category description, Bache goes on to offer an alternative SFL account of this area of grammar. In Bache's model, the focus is on the speaker's communicative motivation for choosing particular verb forms.The relevant choice relations are seen to draw on metafunctionally diverse resources, such as tense, action, aspect and other domains. The basically univariate, serial structure of the verbal group is accordingly enriched with certain characteristics associated with multivariate structures, and the idea of recursion is abandoned. Bache finally examines the descriptive potential of his model in connection with projection, conditions, and narration.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
500 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84553-351-9 (9781845533519)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
University of Southern Denmark
Content
1. Introduction 2. An Introduction to the IFG Model of Tense3. Problems with the IFG Approach to Tense4. Towards an Alternative5. A New SFL Description of Tense and Aspect6. The Narrative Mode7. ConclusionAppendix: Empirical Investigation of the SFL Tense System in BNC