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POLITENESS STRATEGIES:

POLITENESS STRATEGIES:. Taken from: BROWN AND LEVINSON (1987: 91-227) POLITENESS: Some Universals in Language Usage. FACE. Face : a person’s feeling of self-worth and self-image. Two kinds of face:

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POLITENESS STRATEGIES:

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  1. POLITENESSSTRATEGIES: Taken from: BROWN AND LEVINSON (1987: 91-227) POLITENESS: Some Universals in Language Usage.

  2. FACE • Face : a person’s feeling of self-worth and self-image. Two kinds of face: • Positive Face refers to our need to be accepted and liked by others and our need to feel that our social group shares common goals. • Negative Face refers to our right to independence of action and our need not to be imposed on by others.

  3. FACE THREATENING ACT • Face Threatening Act (FTA): an illocutionary act which is able to damage another person’s reputation / threaten other people’s face. • There are two types of FTA:  Act threatening the negative face  Act threatening the positive face • Act threatening the negative face of the addressee: orders, requests, threats, and warnings from the speaker. • Act threatening the positive face of the addressee: offers and promises from the speaker.

  4. POLITENESS STRATEGIES According to Brown and Levinson (1987:91-225), there are four strategies for doing FTA: • Bald on Record • Positive Politeness • Negative Politeness • Off Record

  5. BALD ON RECORD STRATEGY • Bald on-record: These provide no effort by you to reduce the impact of the FTA’s. You will likely shock the person to whom you are speaking to, embarrass them, or make them feel a bit uncomfortable. However, this type of strategy is commonly found with people who know each other very well, and are very comfortable in their environment, such as close friends and family. Example: - An emergency: Help! - Task oriented: Give me that! - Request: Put your coat away. - Alerting: Turn you headlights on!

  6. BALD ON RECORD STRATEGY Bald-on-record strategy can be treated as speaking in conformity with Grice’s Maxims (Grice, 1975). These maxims are an intuitive characterization of conversational principles that would constitute guidelines for achieving maximally efficient communication. • Cases of non-minimization of the face threat: maximum efficiency is very important, and this is mutually known to both S and H, no face redress is necessary. Example: Help! ( not “Please help me”.) • Cases of FTA-oriented bald-on-record usage: It is oriented to face. This illustrates the way in which respect for face involves mutual orientation, so that each participant attempts to foresee what is other participant is attempting to foresee. Example: “Come in, don’t hesitate, I am not busy”.

  7. POSITIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES • Positive Politeness: It is usually seen in groups of friends, or where people in the given social situation know each other fairly well. It usually tries to minimize the distance between them by expressing friendliness and solid interest in the hearer’s need to be respected (minimize the FTA) Example: - Attend to the hearer: “You must be hungry, it’s a long time since breakfast. How about some lunch?” - Avoid disgreement: A: “What is she, small?” B: “Yes, yes, she’s small, smallish, um, not really small but certainly not very big.”

  8. POSITIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES: • Notice, attend to H (his interest, wants, needs, and goods). • Exaggerate (interest, approval, sympathy with H) • Intensify interest to H. • Use in-group identity markers (address form, use of in group language or dialect, use of jargon or slang, contraction and ellipsis). • Seek agreement (safe topics, repetition) • Avoid disagreement (token agreement, pseudo-agreement, white lies, hedging opinions) • Presuppose/raise/assert common ground.

  9. POSITIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES (Cont…) • Joke • Assert or presuppose S’s knowledge of and concern for H’s wants. • Offer, promise. • Be optimistic. • Include both S and H in the activity. • Give (or ask for) reasons. • Assume or assert reciprocity. • Give gifts to H (goods, sympathy, understanding, cooperation).

  10. NEGATIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES • Negative Politeness: The main focus for using this strategy is to assume that you may not be imposing on the hearer, and intruding on their space. Therefore, these automatically assume that there might be some social distance or awkwardness in the situation. Example: - Be indirect: “I’m looking for a comb.” - Forgiveness: “You must forgive me but…….” - Minimize imposition: “I just want to ask you if I could use your computer?”

  11. NEGATIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES: • Be indirect: e.g. by using indirect speech acts. • Question, hedge: e.g. by asking questions such as ‘Could you do this for me?’ • Be pessimistic about things: e.g. by saying ‘This probably won’t be necessary but … ‘ • Minimize imposition on the other person: e.g. by saying ‘I just wanted to ask if you could …’ • Give deference: e.g. by the use of certain address forms.

  12. NEGATIVE POLITENESS STRATEGIES (Cont..) • Apologize to the other person: e.g. by indicating reluctance or begging forgiveness. • Impersonalize things: e.g. by the use of the plural ‘you’ vs ‘I’. • State the imposition as a general social rule or obligation by using ‘request’ as a noun rather than ‘want’ as a verb. • Go ‘on record’ as incurring a debt, or not ‘indebting’ to the other person. • Nominalize

  13. OFF RECORD STRATEGIES • Off-Record (indirect): You are removing yourself from any imposition whatsoever. Example: - Give hints: “It’s cold in here” - Be vague: “Perhaps someone should have been more responsible.” - Be sarcastic, or joking: “Yeah, he’s a real rocket scientist!”

  14. OFF RECORD STRATEGIES: • Give hints • Give association clues. • Presuppose. • Understate. • Overstate • Use tautologies • Use Contradiction • Be ironic • Use metaphors • Use rhetorical questions

  15. OFF RECORD STRATEGIES (Cont…..) • Be ambiguous • Be vague • Over-generalize • Displace H • Be incomplete, use ellipsis.

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