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English Language 2.0 - sample pages StylisticsEnglish Language - Help - Speech - Writing Definition • Stylistic analysis in linguistics refers to the identification of patterns of usage in speech and writing. • Stylistic analysis in literary studies is usually made for the purpose of commenting on quality and meaning in a text. Examples • A stylistic analysis of a roadsign which reads NO LEFT TURN might make the following observations.
Use • In linguistics the purpose of close analysis is to identify and classify the elements of language being used. • In literary studies the purpose is usually an adjunct to understanding, exegesis, and interpretation. • In both cases, an extremely detailed and scrupulous attention is paid to the text. • This process may now be aided by computer programs which able to analyse texts. NB! At this point, the study of language moves into either 'stylistics' or 'literary studies'. • Stylistic analysis is a normal part of literary studies. It is practised as a part of understanding the possible meanings in a text. • It is also generally assumed that the process of analysis will reveal the good qualities of the writing. • Take the opening lines of Shakespeare's Richard III Now is the winter of our discontent • A stylistic analysis might reveal the following points:
• In a complete analysis, the significance of these stylistic details would be related to the events of the play itself, and to Shakespeare's presentation of them. • In some forms of stylistic analysis, the numerical recurrence of certain stylistic features is used to make judgements about the nature and the quality of the writing. • However, it is important to recognise that the concept of style is much broader than just the 'good style' of literary prose. • For instance, even casual communication such as a manner of speaking or a personal letter might have an individual style. • However, to give a detailed account of this style requires the same degree of linguistic analysis as literary texts. • Stylistic analysis of a non-literary text for instance means studying in detail the features of a passage from such genres as:
• The method of analysis can be seen as looking at the text in great detail, observing what the parts are, and saying what function they perform in the context of the passage. • It is rather like taking a car-engine to pieces, looking at each component in detail, then observing its function as the whole engine starts working. • These are features which are likely to occur in a text whose function is to instruct:
• Features are dealt with in three stages, as follows:
• The features chosen from any text will be those which characterise the piece as to its function. They will be used by the analyst to prove the initial statement which is made about the linguistic nature of the text as a whole. • This method purports to be fairly scientific. A hypothesis is stated and then proved. It is a useful discipline which encourages logical thought and can be transferred to many other areas of academic study. • This is one reason why the discipline of stylistic analysis is so useful: it can be applied to a variety of subjects.
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