pile of books
skip main nav
 Ling 131: Language & Style
 

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

skip topic navigation
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
 
Useful Links
Readings
Bilgewater passage

Bilgewater: Context and Cohesion

Task B - Our answers

(13) This was the third interview of the day. (14) The first had been as she had expected - carping, snappish, harsh, watchful - unfriendly even before you had your hand off the door handle.

The viewpoint is that of the candidate. The proximal deictic demonstrative pronoun 'this' in S 13 suggests that the third interview is in the present-time experience of the candidate (note that the tense is past, however, the default tense for novelistic narration, so we can see that the sentence is a 'narrator/character mix': the narrator is taking up the time-viewpoint of the character). Only the candidate will have experience all three interviews. In S14 we get the use of the past perfect (pluperfect) tense when the first interview is referred to in order to make it clear that it counts as past time from the perspective of the candidate. The string of evaluative adjectives - 'carping, snappish, harsh, watchful - unfriendly' all indicate the personal viewpoint of the candidate. Note also the move from the 3rd-person reference for the candidate to 2nd-person as this sentence proceeds, bringing us closer to the character's viewpoint.

(19) That had been a long one.

This sentence refers to the second interview. Like the reference to the first interview in S14, the tense used is past perfect, suggesting that it is referring to past time for the candidate, and the distal demonstrative pronoun also suggests temporal, spatial and attitudinal remoteness in relation to the candidate's present-time experience.

(31) I think Miss Blenkinsop-Briggs has already answered my questions in the interview this morning.

This is a sentence of the candidate's speech during the second interview. So, not surprisingly, the viewpoint markers all relate to her. Title + last name for 'Miss Blenkinsop Briggs' indicates her felt social distance from the socially superior Miss Briggs, her previous interviewer. The personal pronouns are 1st-person as they refer to the speaker, and the present tense of 'think' and present perfect of 'has . . . answered' indicate present time and recent past time for the candidate respectively. The proximal deictic expression 'this morning' helps us to see that the first interview must have taken place on the same day as the second, and that, by inference, the second interview must be in the afternoon.

(38) And now, here we are. (39) The third interview.

As with S19, in S38 we get proximal deixis, because we are back at the third interview (as S39 makes clear contextually). This is expressed deictically through the proximal demonstrative prtonoun 'this', the proximal spatial deixis of the adverb 'here' and the proximal time deixis indicated by the shift in the narration to the present tense for the VP.

(70) Shall I come here? (71) Would I like it after all?

Here we have the thoughts of the character at the very end of the passage. She is asking herself whether she will go to Cambridge and whether she will like it.

In S70, we have the first person pronoun, because the candidate is referring to herself, and the proximal spatial adverb 'here'. We also have present tense because the character is thinking about future time (note that, unlike many languages, English does not have a future tense, but alludes to future time by a combination of present tense, adverbials marked for future and modal verbs like 'will ' and 'shall'). The verb 'come' is also a proximal deictic, expressing the future possibility of the candidate moving from somewhere else to where she is presently located.

S71 keeps the tense and pronouns seen in S70, but uses the modal verb 'would' to express hypotheticality. The main verb 'like' also expresses the candidate's viewpoint, as it is a cognition verb to which she is Subject. Note, incidentally, how 'after all' suggests that the candidate's experience until the last interview at least, must have been predominantly negative.

Overall

Overall, what we see in these sentences, taken from across the range of situations depicted in the passage, is a consistent tendency for the narrator to take up a complex viewpoint position (spatial, temporal, attitudinal and conceptual) associated with the candidate, and for that viewpoint to be marked deictically, as well as in other ways. We will now turn to some of those other ways.

 

 


to the top
Next: Task C - Other markers of the candidate's viewpoint next

Home ¦ Outline ¦ Contents ¦ Glossary