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 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

 Topic 10 (session A) - Prose analysis > Bilgewater: Context and Cohesion > Task A > Our answer

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Session Overview
Bilgewater: General
Prose Analysis Methodology
Bilgewater: Lexis
Bilgewater: Foregrounding
Bilgewater: Context and cohesion
Bilgewater: Speech & thought presentation
Bilgewater: Grammar
Methodology checksheet
Topic 10 'tool' summary
 
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Bilgewater passage

Bilgewater: Context and Cohesion

Task A - Our answer

Although this is the beginning of the novel, there is consistent use of the definite, not the indefinite, article. This extensive use of definite reference is 'disorderly' for the reader, who does not know who the people are, what the interview is about etc. So this suggests an 'in medias res' beginning, and that we have to pretend to ourselves, as we read, that we already know about the people and things that are referred to. This is a major indication that we are meant to see what is being portrayed from the viewpoint of one of the characters. But how do we know that the viewpoint established is that of the candidate, not the Principal?

Our schematic assumptions, triggered by what is in the text, play a big part here. First of all, note the use of the non-factive perception verb 'seemed' in the first sentence. It would appear that the person whose viewpoint we are getting is not completely certain that the interview is over. Our schematic assumptions about 3rd-person narrators in novels is that they are omniscient, and so the 'seemed' does not seem appropriate for the narrator. Similarly, our schematic assumptions about interviews are that normally only the person conducting the interview (here the Principal) has the power to end it, and so that person will know for definite when the interview has ended. So again, 'seemed' is not appropriate for the Principal's viewpoint, and by default we must be getting the viewpoint of the candidate.

It would also appear that the description of the Principal is from the spatial position occupied by the candidate. Schematically, we expect the interviewer and interviewee to be facing one another, and we are told that the Principal has her back to the window. The description of the outline shape of her head is consistent with the view of someone looking at the Principal and not being able to see the details of the face because she is being observed against the light coming in behind her, through the window.

 


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