Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective

The functions of the simple past and the present perfect appear to be well delimited in English according to prescriptive grammars. However, in actual use their distribution is still a challenging area of English linguistics since there are fuzzy cases in which this distinction is blurred. For examp...

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Main Author: Muñoz Carmen Portero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-12-01
Series:Open Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2018-0032
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spelling doaj-03f891f713e44013bc4367a8eb86a9e52021-10-02T19:19:45ZengDe GruyterOpen Linguistics2300-99692018-12-014165768410.1515/opli-2018-0032opli-2018-0032Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG PerspectiveMuñoz Carmen Portero0University of Córdoba,Córdoba, SpainThe functions of the simple past and the present perfect appear to be well delimited in English according to prescriptive grammars. However, in actual use their distribution is still a challenging area of English linguistics since there are fuzzy cases in which this distinction is blurred. For example, in some varieties of English the present perfect seems to be taking over the role of the simple past to express definite past in narratives, where the simple past is the default tense. In these cases, the use of the present perfect has been regarded to be functionally motivated by the speaker’s intention to highlight the current relevance of the event expressed by this form (Ritz, 2010, Walker, 2011). The main objective of this research will be to use the results of corpus analysis and of the relevant studies on this topic and to propose an FDG analysis of these data. It will be concluded that the use of the present perfect in narratives has various functions captured at two different levels of the architecture of FDG, namely the Representational Level (RL) and the Interpersonal Level (IL). At the RL, the present perfect functions either as a marker of resultative aspect, or as a signal that a new narrative Episode is introduced. At IL, this form functions as a device for Emphasis, highlighting a salient passage in the narrative.https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2018-0032present perfectnarrativesepisodesemphasisfunctional discourse grammar
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muñoz Carmen Portero
spellingShingle Muñoz Carmen Portero
Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
Open Linguistics
present perfect
narratives
episodes
emphasis
functional discourse grammar
author_facet Muñoz Carmen Portero
author_sort Muñoz Carmen Portero
title Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
title_short Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
title_full Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
title_fullStr Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Tense Switching in English Narratives: an FDG Perspective
title_sort tense switching in english narratives: an fdg perspective
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Linguistics
issn 2300-9969
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The functions of the simple past and the present perfect appear to be well delimited in English according to prescriptive grammars. However, in actual use their distribution is still a challenging area of English linguistics since there are fuzzy cases in which this distinction is blurred. For example, in some varieties of English the present perfect seems to be taking over the role of the simple past to express definite past in narratives, where the simple past is the default tense. In these cases, the use of the present perfect has been regarded to be functionally motivated by the speaker’s intention to highlight the current relevance of the event expressed by this form (Ritz, 2010, Walker, 2011). The main objective of this research will be to use the results of corpus analysis and of the relevant studies on this topic and to propose an FDG analysis of these data. It will be concluded that the use of the present perfect in narratives has various functions captured at two different levels of the architecture of FDG, namely the Representational Level (RL) and the Interpersonal Level (IL). At the RL, the present perfect functions either as a marker of resultative aspect, or as a signal that a new narrative Episode is introduced. At IL, this form functions as a device for Emphasis, highlighting a salient passage in the narrative.
topic present perfect
narratives
episodes
emphasis
functional discourse grammar
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2018-0032
work_keys_str_mv AT munozcarmenportero tenseswitchinginenglishnarrativesanfdgperspective
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