Bourgoin, Charlotte
2022.
A corpus-based study of the prosody and
information structure of English it-clefts and
French c’est-cleft.
PhD Thesis,
Cardiff University and University of Leuven.
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Abstract
Clefts are a productive resource serving information structural purposes, making them a useful device to fulfil specific communicative and rhetorical goals. This study investigates the use of clefts in English and French, first in their own right and then contrastively. Using data from comparable corpora of spontaneous dialogues, I show that clefts display a wider variation in their information structural behaviour than previously assumed. At the theoretical-methodological level, I develop a comprehensive framework for the study of two information structural phenomena by providing i) a model for the analysis of discourse-givenness/newness and ii) a fine grained methodology for the analysis of prosodically coded focus. I give theoretical arguments for why information structural patterns have to be fundamentally distinguished from the syntactically coded specification relation between value and variable they are mapped onto. This enables me to study the interplay between the different layers of information structure, which are distinct, yet interrelated, and the interaction between prosody and the grammatical structure of the cleft, which is not solely dedicated to (narrow) focus marking as has been argued. At the theoretical-descriptive level, my qualitative and quantitative data-analyses establish that the two main dimensions of information structure are operationalised differently in English and French clefts. In terms of the distinction discourse-given versus discourse-new, there are no major differences, although French clefts feature more anaphoric pronouns as value. However, focus assignment patterns contrast strongly, with it-clefts favouring narrow focus and c’est clefts broad focus. I also show that reduced clefts, which have received little attention in the literature, are more than an informationally motivated variant with their own potential for achieving specific rhetorical effects. The account presented in this thesis thus resets base-line thinking about clefts as specificational constructions enabling multiplicity and versatility of information structural realisations, whose profiles specialise differently in individual languages.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
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Date Type: | Completion |
Status: | Unpublished |
Schools: | English, Communication and Philosophy |
Subjects: | P Language and Literature > P Philology. Linguistics |
Date of First Compliant Deposit: | 16 January 2023 |
Last Modified: | 12 Jan 2024 02:30 |
URI: | https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/155819 |
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