Systemic
Functional Grammar
A Grammatical Description Developed by Michael Halliday
Systemic
functional grammar (SFG), a component of systemic functional linguistics (SFL),
is a form of grammatical description originally developed by Michael Halliday
in a career spanning more than 50 years. It is part of a social semiotic
approach to language called systemic functional linguistics. The term systemic
refers to the view of language as "a network of systems, or interrelated
sets of options for making meaning". The term functional refers to
Halliday's view that language is as it is because of what it has evolved to do.
Thus, what he refers to as the multidimensional architecture of language
"reflects the multidimensional nature of human experience and
interpersonal relations."
Influences
Halliday
describes his grammar as built on the work of Saussure, Louis Hjelmslev,
Malinowski, J.R. Firth, and the Prague school linguists. In addition, he drew
on the work of the American anthropological linguists Boas, Sapir and Whorf.
His "main inspiration" was Firth, to whom he owes, among other
things, the notion of language as system. Among American linguists, Benjamin
Lee Whorf had "the most profound effect on my own thinking". Whorf
"showed how it is that human beings do not all mean alike, and how their
unconscious ways of meaning are among the most significant manifestations of their
culture"
From his
studies in China, he lists Luo Changpei and Wang Li as two scholars from whom
he gained "new and exciting insights into language". He credits Luo
for giving him a diachronic perspective and insights into a non-Indo-European
language family. From Wang Li he learnt "many things, including research
methods in dialectology, the semantic basis of grammar, and the history of
linguistics in China".
Basic Tenets
Some
interrelated key terms underpin Halliday's approach to grammar, which forms
part of his account of how language works. These concepts are: system,
(meta)function, and rank.
For Halliday,
grammar is described as systems not as rules, on the basis that every
grammatical structure involves a choice from a describable set of options.
Language is thus a meaning potential. Grammarians in SF tradition use system
networks to map the available options in a language. In relation to English,
for instance, Halliday has described systems such as mood, agency, theme, etc.
Halliday describes grammatical systems as closed, i.e. as having a finite set
of options. By contrast, lexical sets are open systems, since new words come
into a language all the time.
These
grammatical systems play a role in the construal of meanings of different
kinds. This is the basis of Halliday's claim that language is metafunctionally
organised. He argues that the raison d'ĂȘtre of language is meaning in social
life, and for this reason all languages have three kinds of semantic
components. All languages have resources for construing experience (the
ideational component), resources for enacting humans' diverse and complex
social relations (the interpersonal component), and resources for enabling
these two kinds of meanings to come together in coherent text (the textual
function). Each of the grammatical systems proposed by Halliday are related to
these metafunctions. For instance, the grammatical system of 'mood' is
considered to be centrally related to the expression of interpersonal meanings,
'process type' to the expression of experiential meanings, and 'theme' to the
expression of textual meanings.
Traditionally
the "choices" are viewed in terms of either the content or the
structure of the language used. In SFG, language is analysed in three ways
(strata): semantics, phonology, and lexicogrammar. SFG presents a view of
language in terms of both structure (grammar) and words (lexis). The term
"lexicogrammar" describes this combined approach.
Metafunctions
From early on
in his account of language, Halliday has argued that it is inherently
functional. His early papers on the grammar of English make reference to the
"functional components" of language, as "generalized uses of
language, which, since they seem to determine the nature of the language
system, require to be incorporated into our account of that system." Halliday argues that this functional
organization of language "determines the form taken by grammatical
structure".
Halliday
refers to his functions of language as metafunctions. He proposes three general
functions: the ideational, the interpersonal and the textual.
Ideational
Metafunction
The
ideational metafunction is the function for construing human experience. It is
the means by which we make sense of "reality". Halliday divides the
ideational function into two functions: the logical and the experiential
metafunctions. The logical metafunction refers to the grammatical resources for
building up grammatical units into complexes, for instance, for combining two
or more clauses into a clause complex. The experiential function refers to the
grammatical resources involved in construing the flux of experience through the
unit of the clause.
The
ideational metafunction reflects the contextual value of "field",
that is, the nature of the social process in which the language is implicated.
An analysis of a text from the perspective of the ideational function involves
inquiring into the choices in the grammatical system of
"transitivity": that is, process types, participant types,
circumstance types, combined with an analysis of the resources through which
clauses are combined together. Halliday's An Introduction to Functional Grammar
(in the third edition, with revisions by Christian Matthiessen) sets out the
description of these grammatical systems.
Interpersonal
Metafunction
The
interpersonal metafunction relates to a text's aspects of tenor or
interactivity. Like field, tenor comprises three component areas: the
speaker/writer persona, social distance, and relative social status. Social
distance and relative social status are applicable only to spoken texts.
Note—this is not so, looking at the text of O´Halloran we are told that we no
longer have the option to contrast the various speakers but we can examine
"how the individual authors present themselves to the reader",
therefore, we are able to look at social distance and relative social status in
texts where there is only one author.
The
speaker/writer persona concerns the stance, personalisation and standing of the
speaker or writer. This involves looking at whether the writer or speaker has a
neutral attitude, which can be seen through the use of positive or negative language.
Social distance means how close the speakers are, e.g. how the use of nicknames
shows the degree to which they are intimate. Relative social status asks
whether they are equal in terms of power and knowledge on a subject, for
example, the relationship between a mother and child would be considered
unequal. Focuses here are on speech acts (e.g. whether one person tends to ask
questions and the other speaker tends to answer), who chooses the topic, turn
management, and how capable both speakers are of evaluating the subject.
Textual
Metafunction
The textual
metafunction relates to mode; the internal organisation and communicative
nature of a text. This comprises textual interactivity, spontaneity and
communicative distance.
Textual interactivity
is examined with reference to disfluencies such as hesitators, pauses and
repetitions.
Spontaneity
is determined through a focus on lexical density, grammatical complexity,
coordination (how clauses are linked together) and the use of nominal groups.
The study of communicative distance involves looking at a text’s cohesion—that
is, how it hangs together, as well as any abstract language it uses.
Cohesion is
analysed in the context of both lexical and grammatical as well as intonational
aspects with reference to lexical chains and, in the speech register, tonality,
tonicity, and tone. The lexical aspect focuses on sense relations and lexical
repetitions, while the grammatical aspect looks at repetition of meaning shown
through reference, substitution and ellipsis, as well as the role of linking
adverbials.
Systemic
functional grammar deals with all of these areas of meaning equally within the
grammatical system itself.
Children’s
grammar
Michael
Halliday (1973) outlined seven functions of language with regard to the grammar
used by children:
- the instrumental function serves to manipulate the environment, to cause certain events to happen;
- the regulatory function of language is the control of events;
- the representational function is the use of language to make statements, convey facts and knowledge, explain, or report to represent reality as the speaker/writer sees it;
- the interactional function of language serves to ensure social maintenance;
- the personal function is to express emotions, personality, and “gut-level” reactions;
- the heuristic function used to acquire knowledge, to learn about the environment;
- the imaginative function serves to create imaginary systems or ideas.
Halliday's
theory sets out to explain how spoken and written texts construe meanings and
how the resources of language are organised in open systems and functionally
bound to meanings. It attempts to be a theory of language in use, creating
systematic relations between choices and forms within the less abstract strata
of grammar and phonology, on the one hand, and more abstact strata such as
context of situation and context of culture on the other. It thus a radically
different theory of language from others which explore less abstract strata as
autonomous systems, the most notable here being Noam Chomsky's. Since the
principal aim of systemic functional grammar is to represent the grammatical
system as a resource for meaning making, it addresses some rather different
concerns. For example, it does not try to address Chomsky's thesis that there
is a "finite rule system which generates all and only the grammatical
sentences in a language". Halliday's theory encourages a more open
approach to the definition of language as a resource; rather than focus on
grammaticality as such, a systemic functional grammatical treatment focuses
instead on the relative frequencies of choices made in uses of language and
assumes that these relative frequencies reflect the probability that particluar
paths through the available resources will be chosen rather than others. Thus,
SFG does not describe language as a finite rule system, but rather as a system
realised by instantiations which is continuously expanded by the very
instantiations that realise it and which is continuously reproduced and
recreated with use.
Another way
to understand the difference in concerns between systemic functional grammar
and most variants of generative grammar is through Chomsky's claim that
"linguistics is a sub-branch of psychology". Halliday investigates
linguistics more as a sub-branch of sociology. SFG therefore pays much more
attention to pragmatics and discourse semantics than is traditionally the case
in formalism.
The orientation
of systemic functional grammar has also served to encourage several further
grammatical accounts that, on the one hand, deal with some perceived weaknesses
of the theory and, on the other, similarly orient to issues not seen to be
addressed in more structural accounts. Examples include, for example, the model
of Richard Hudson called word grammar.
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