Lexical recycling in Chewa discourse: Aspects of linguistic form and function in the surface realization of a narrative organizational model

Issue Date: 
1975
Is Part Of Series: 
Work Papers of the Summer Institute of Linguistics, University of North Dakota, vol. 19
Extent: 
pages 28-92
Abstract: 
From the introduction: "The limitations of a purely linguistic description of an oral performance [...] do not deny the fact that careful linguistic studies can perform a valuable service in the exposition of both the form and meaning of the total communicative complex. It is the purpose of this paper, then, to substantiate that claim by applying a number of the insights and techniques of discourse analysis procedures [...] to a selected group of Chewa narratives. Each of these stories features an organizational model which is quite common among the Bantu-speaking peoples of Central and South Africa. Essentially, this model consists of the ordered repetition or 'recycling' of a basic core of significant actions, each set being grouped around a nuclear song and allowing for the inclusion of a limited amount of new, plot-related information. The successive repetitions of these event-sets, or narrative cycles, functions as an indispensable element in the artistic unfolding of a story's plot, and correspondingly, in the dramatic effect that this has on the audience."
Publication Status: 
Published
Country: 
Malawi
Mozambique
Zambia
Subject Languages: 
Content Language: 
Field: 
Work Type: 
Subject: 
Nature of Work: 
Entry Number: 
40189