Phraseology and Culture in English
particular “native” species may be described as feral if found growing in
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Phraseology and Culture in English
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- {(adj) + N} + COMMUNITY
particular “native” species may be described as feral if found growing in one area of Australia to which settlers imported them from another. “Feral olive trees” are an exotic species which adapt readily to environmental conditions in South Australia, but as the collocation suggests, they are not always welcome. From this, it might be inferred that non-Indigenous Australians as a whole could be described as “feral”, however, this is not the case. Groups of humans who are referred to as “feral” in Australia include “feral chil- dren”, “feral teenagers” and “feral activists”. These collocations, used with an attitude of despair and hopelessness, have dispensed with the connota- tion that the humans so denoted were originally cultivated and are poten- tially controllable. Is eradication really the only answer? Lexical developments in greenspeaking 295 Our data contain a number of collocations which use community to refer to various activities to do with the environment. We acknowledge the spe- cialised scientific use of community, for example within Botany, but the examples from our data arise largely out of popular discourse, which de- fines community somewhat differently. In environmental language, as in linguistics, the use of the word is vague. It is difficult to pin down the boundaries of a community; who is accountable; and who takes responsibil- ity for the things that occur and for the things they happen to. {(adj) + N} + COMMUNITY broader community professional development community healthy community rural farming community livable community struggling community local community wider community medical community Like feral, community may be applied to fauna, flora and humans, but in our data, the use of community is restricted to describing groups of humans. 2.5. Catch-phrases Proponents of environmentalism have created a number of catch-phrases which summarize its key philosophies, concerns and sentiments. Such catch- phrases may originate from political platforms and environmental organisa- tions. They often start off as slogans chanted at activist rallies, parts of for- mal campaign speeches and publicity, or emblazoned on posters, stickers and buttons. “Think globally, act locally” is one of the best-known environmental catch-phrases, used to encourage humans to change their habits in order to do less damage to the environment. It can be seen that following the princi- ple of Zipf’s Law, the meaning of this rather long catch-phrase has been retained, and is encapsulated within shorter slogans such as the now com- mon “global village”. In terms of consumer habit formation, another phrase which is now fre- quently trotted out by retailers is “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle”, as referred to above. In the discourse about energy and fossil fuels an oft-touted lexical phrase revolves around the need to “reduce greenhouse emissions”. The use of reduce in this phrase echoes the threefold slogan above. This catch-phrase 296 Melina Magdalena and Peter Mühlhäusler is used both by proponents of alternative renewable energies, and by pro- moters of fossil fuel consumption. Specific catch-phrases can serve as a basis for the formation of more lo- cally-bound catch-phrases. “Save the whales”, for example, has many vari- ants. Some are very general, such as “save the earth”, but others are more specific and localised, such as “Save the Patawalonga”. Catch-phrases built around “Save the –” are emotive, indicating not only an urgency, but again, the capacity of humans to alter circumstances for the better. 2.5.1. Pronouns The degree to which speakers identify with and feel involved in the fate of what they are trying to save is indicated in the frequent use of the pronoun our, instead of the more generic the. Our data further suggest a slight trend to the choice of whether to use our in this set of catch-phrases, as shown in the table below. It almost seems as though this choice reflects a feeling about whether the general fate of humans is bound up with the fate of the subject under appeal. Perhaps human survival would be less impacted upon if koalas and whales disappeared, but we can hardly get by without “our climate”. Download 1.68 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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