A socio-pragmatic comparative study of
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ThesisMA
2.5. Communicative Competence
Hymes (1974) introduced the concept of communicative competence. He argued that communication is not governed by fixed linguistic rules. It is, however, a two-step process in which the speaker first evaluates the social context of the speech and then select among the communicative options available for encoding his intent. In other words, linguistic competence is not the only element responsible for communication. Rather, an interaction is perceivable between linguistic knowledge and society. Communicative competence postulates linguistic diversity or a repertoire of linguistic codes for the same concept. On the basis of the situation, the competent speaker can choose an appropriate code. In doing so, the speaker uses the so-called knowledge of the components of speech (i.e. SPEAKING). According to Hymes, any speech situation possesses eight defining features: (1) S refers to the setting (i.e. the time, place, physical circumstances, and psychological setting or scene); (2) P refers to participants (i.e. speaker, addressor, hearer, and addressee); (3) E refers to the ends (i.e. purpose, outcomes, and goals); (4) A refers to act sequences (i.e. message content and message form); (5) K refers to keys (i.e. manner/spirit in which something is said); (6) I refers to instrumentalities (i.e. channels and forms); (7) N refers to norms (i.e. norms of interaction and interpretation); and (8) G refers to genres (i.e. categories of communication). Dittmar (1976) points out that linguistic codes are not the only component of communicative competence. He argues that communicative competence also includes a whole repertoire of psychological, social, and pragmatic strategies. CHAPTER TWO: REVIEW OF THE RELATED LITERATURE 17 The elaboration of communicative competence and the identification of its components gave sociopragmatics the new role of determining "what a speaker needs to know to be able to communicate effectively in culturally significant settings" (Rivers, 1981: 84). The possession of this kind of knowledge and the ability to use it in organizing communication had been noted as related to the degree of socialization of the speaker. Download 0.87 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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