Application of Conversational Implications in English Audiovisual Course英语专业毕业论文.doc
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1、Application of Conversational Implications in English Audio-visual Course1. IntroductionNowadays, it is gradually emphasized that we should foster English major students with integrated skills. As a result, considerable attention has been devoted to English audio-visual course. However, the teaching
2、 effect of this course has been unsatisfactory, which has led to a central question in research about how to improve students listening comprehension by watching English movies. In the past twenty years, this question has been the focus of many studies, for example, Yan Canxun (2005: 56) proposes a
3、teaching method that oral English practice substitutes for listening training in listening classes while students learn autonomously after class; while Guo Suihong (2004: 45) advocates teaching rather than testing, paying more attention to authentic input and basing on the learner-centered approach,
4、 so that students listening comprehension can be developed; and recently, Lu Guojun and Wu Xingdong (2007: 25) focus on the structure inferences and the role of discourse intonation in listening, and try to improve the students listening comprehension by reading and intonation training.The researche
5、s above are meaningful in some ways, but one thing they often ignore is the importance of comprehension. According to Keith Johnson (2002: 254), there are strange phenomena in text comprehension. Sometimes it is possible to understand every word of a text and still not know what it is about, and som
6、etimes it is possible to understand a message even when there is no evidence for your interpretation of the actual words on the pages. That is just the case in English audio-visual course. No matter how good ones listening skill may be, he can never make thorough and authentic comprehension if he ju
7、st stops at the literal meaning. This paper makes an attempt to use the conversational implicature, proposed by Paul Grice, to analyze the conversations in English movies, and get the real and correct understanding of these seemingly strange conversations. For example:(1) Doctor: I need to give you
8、an anesthesia.Teddy: Do I look really that stupid?Doctor: I cannot do an operation like this without an anesthesia. (From Prison Break)Judging the conversation above from its literal meaning, Teddys answer did not show any sign of rejection or acceptance of an anesthesia. It seems that he made his r
9、eply totally unrelated to the doctors words. But if we make a little analysis of it, it is very easy for us to understand that he actually refused the doctor. His way of answering is an indirect way of refusal with much stronger force.How does the reply of Teddy mean “I know that you want to make me
10、 unconscious by giving me an anesthesia. And youd better stop your plan because Im not a fool.”? And how does the doctor understand, through the literal meaning, what Teddy indicates? The conversational implicature theory can give us convincing explanations. The above conversations frequently appear
11、 in English movies. If teachers do not employ the theory to explain them, students may often fail to understand them.2. Cooperative Principle and conversational implications2.1 Cooperative PrincipleIt is known that quite often a speaker can mean a lot more than what is said. The problem is to explai
12、n how the speaker can manage to convey more than what is said and how the hearer can arrive at the speakers meaning. Grice (1975: 45) believes that there must be some mechanisms governing the production and comprehension of these utterances. He suggests that there is a set of assumptions guiding the
13、 conduct of conversation. This is what he calls the Cooperative Principle. He formulates the principle and its maxims as follows:Make your conversational contribution as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the exchange in which you are engaged. (Yule
14、, 2000: 145)To specify the Cooperative Principle further, Grice introduced four categories of maxims as follows:The maxim of quantity:1. Make your contribution as informative as required (for the current purpose of the exchange).2. Do not make your contribution more informative than is required.The
15、maxim of quality:1. Do not say what you believe to be false.2. Do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence.The maxim of relation:Be relevant.The maxim of manner:1. Avoid obscurity of expression.2. Avoid ambiguity.3. Be brief (avoid unnecessary prolixity).4. Be orderly. To put it very simply
16、, the CP means that we should say what is true in a clear and relevant manner. It is important to take these maxims as unstated assumptions we have in conversations. We assume that people are normally going to provide an appropriate amount of information, and that they are telling the truth, being r
17、elevant, and trying to be as clear as they can. Speakers rarely mention these principles simply because they are assumed tacitly in verbal interactions (刘润清、文旭,2006:154).2.2 Conversational implicationsConversational implications, to put it simply, refer to a kind of extra meaning that is not literal
18、ly contained in the utterance. It is a meaning different from the “meaning” in semantics. The “meaning” in semantics is the literal meaning of a word or a sentence. For example, “Have you read todays newspaper?” just means that the speaker wants to know whether the listener has read the newspaper or
19、 not. The “meaning” in pragmatics is totally different, focusing on the meaning in a certain context. So the sentence above can mean “Please pass the newspaper to me since you have read it.”. The “meaning” in semantics and the “meaning” in pragmatics can be the same, and can also be different. When
20、they are different, conversational implications are made (申小龙,2003:177).How does the speaker convey his implied meaning when he is speaking? And how does the hearer make the right understanding, through the literal meaning, of what the speaker indicates?Grices basic idea is that in communication, sp
21、eakers aim to follow the CP and its maxims, and that hearers interpret utterances with these maxims in mind. According to Grice, utterance interpretation is not a matter of decoding messages, but rather involves (i) taking the meaning of the sentences together with contextual information, (ii) using
22、 reference rules, and (iii) working out what the speaker means on the basis of the assumption that the utterance conforms to the maxims. The main advantages of this approach from Grices point of view is that it provides a pragmatic explanation for a wide range of phenomena, especially for conversati
23、onal implicationa kind of extra meaning that is not literally contained in the utterance (胡壮麟,2001:205).The conversational implications can be concluded by examining which maxim of the Cooperative Principle the speakers had violated. Take this following conversation for example:(2) A: Where does C l
24、ive?B: Somewhere in the South of France.This violation can be explained by the adherence to the maxim of quality: Speaker B cannot truthfully provide more information. Alternatively, in some contexts, it can be explained as carrying an implication that the speaker does not, for some reason or other,
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