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Speech Acts – Theory & Use

Speech Acts – Theory & Use
One of the most revolutionary ideas in the development of linguistics as a discipline has been the departure from a purely linguistic approach towards a pragmatic and functional study of language.
The emphasis of the Speech Act Theory is on the “act” or the function of a linguistic expression and not the grapheme, phoneme, morpheme or lexeme. It suggests a departure from linguistic analysis based on words and sentences and their semantic meaning to the meaning of “utterances” that originates from the function they fulfil, the purpose they serve or the intention with which they are used.
The Speech Act Theory has its basis in the idea that language is an instrument which is put to various uses. In other words, language is used an instrument to achieve various goals or perform various functions.
The theory is based on and brings to the forefront important facts about language:
- that language and its components do not have an intrinsic meaning or validity, but that they are conventions that are agreed upon by a linguistic community that:
- the meanings are assigned to words or linguistic expressions;
- the conventions for assigning of meaning to sounds and graphemes are arbitrary and are not based on any scientific reason or divine source.
Further, this theory makes certain important assertions about the nature of language and which form the fundamental premises of this and other theories that build on it:
- Surely we admit that the same linguistic expression can have varied uses and hence different meaning in different situations and contexts, depending on how they are used;
- Over and above the semantic meaning of an expression, there is a certain pragmatic meaning that an expression or utterance assumes by virtue of the intention with which it is used. In other words, the pragmatic meaning is that meaning that an expression derives by the way it is used or what it is used to convey.
To elucidate this point, let us take the example of a simple utterance – “Wow!” or “Great job!” At the face of it, these expressions have a certain semantic meaning which we are familiar with; they are used to fulfil the function of praising or congratulating someone. However, the very same words, when used with sarcasm and in a situation that calls for contempt and disapproval, are used to criticize, castigate and demean the hearer. In another situation, the same linguistic instruments may be used to mock and ridicule the listener. We see, therefore, that apart from the hitherto agreed upon semantic meaning of the words have only a partial role to play in the overall meaning (which we now call pragmatic) in terms of the function these expressions fulfil.
The words highlighted in the above explanation are what are known as Speech Acts! They are acts we perform when we say something. They are acts that we perform while and in using language! Praising, congratulating, criticizing, castigating, demeaning, mocking and ridiculing are few of the innumerable “acts” we can perform with the help of language. There is so much we can do with language – the list is endless and limitless.
In the sections that follow, we shall discuss in detail, the various aspects of this theory and how it is relevant. The theory has opened up a plethora of possibilities in the area of communication, psychology and philosophy. In the field of linguistics and communication, it forms the basis of discourse analysis from the point of understanding what writers and speakers do or try to achieve with their writings and speeches. In the field of psychology, various theories of interpersonal communication have become possible with the help of the understanding of speech acts. Finally, from a philosophical perspective, the theory has formed the basis for language philosophy and borders with esoteric studies of mysticism.
An important finding of the speech act theory, as discussed above, is that the meaning of the word is not intrinsic to it, but
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