Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
The Linguistic and Literary Perspective of Time
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3.1. The Linguistic and Literary Perspective of Time
Scientists have always claimed that the notion of time can be defined from various angles, namely: linguistically, semantically, scientifically, and literarily. Indeed, what is the difference between the linguistic and literary perspective of time? As Anna-Teresa Tymienecka states in her study (2007:56), linguistic perspective of time deals with the ways in which time is expressed in language. One way in which language encodes time relates to the range of linguistic phenomena of known as aspect. Linguistically, time can be seen as a wide abstract entity, while different aspects are responsible for relating to the way in which action is distributed through time, as encoded by language. Nevertheless, aspect is not a homogenous category, and even an individual language has a range of ways of encoding the distribution of action through time. There are two major aspects related to the expression of time in language, namely: grammatical aspect and lexical aspect. Grammatical aspect characterizes the particular action or activity described in a situation and shows if that action is already completed, or continuing. Grammatical aspect manifests itself via the use of tenses in a language. Let us now have a look at the following extract from Woolf’s fiction: (18) But what she wished to get hold of was the very jar on the nerves, the thing itself before it has been made anything. (2006: 158) As seen in the quotation, Perfect tenses in Woolf’s novels are typically applied in order to indicate the completeness of the action, while Continuous or Perfect Continuous tenses typically indicate the duration of an activity. In other words, it is possible to say that activities expressed via Perfect tenses are temporarily bounded, or limited, while the activities described by means of Continuous tenses cover a wider scope of time and thus, are said to be relatively free as far as their temporality is concerned. I would like to foreground that in To the Lighthouse, Perfect tenses are use more often than the Simple ones, which, in my opinion, shows the writer’s choice to transcribe her characters’ minds in the form of temporal mosaic consisting of completed bits and pieces of experience. Although in the novel past, present, and future moments are intermingled and sometimes even difficult to recognize and to distinguish, each of them is from its own perspective finished and limited by the whole of the passing time. In addition to the grammatical aspect, we have to pay attention to the phenomenon of lexical aspect. Indeed, time both in language and in the chosen Woolf’s novel is expressed not only with the help of particular tenses, but it is also incorporated in the meaning of words. Linguistically, words have different denotative and connotative meaning, and notions related to time and temporality should not be considered as an exception. In his research, Sanders (1994:245) reveals 57 that temporal experiences are complex, multifaceted, and subjectively real, which is to say directly experienced. For instance, such verbs as “like, love, hate, seem” express long lasting states, while the words “open, explode, fall” are typically chosen to speak bout short, sudden, or unexpected actions which do not last long. As can be seen from the following short examples from the novel (1927), the lexical aspect of linguistic time is closely related to the semantic side of the word as it denotes the meaning of a lexical item by indicating the type of action it characterizes: (19) At the same time, she seemed to be sitting beside Mrs Ramsay on the beach… as Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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