RP:
A performative utterance (and there are lots of problems with Austin'soriginal distinctions) is one by means of which the utterer does something: the utterance is the 'doing.'
"the utterance is the doing" -- exactly. Now, my question is are we being fundamentalists here? If I say, "I'm sorry, I wish you had won the debate." How is that less performative than "Congratulations!" If I tell a joke with the intention of making my listener laugh -- and she does -- how is that less performative than "Congratulations"?
Talk to me. Mike Geary Memphis----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert Paul" <rpaul@xxxxxxxx>
To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, November 19, 2006 5:42 PM Subject: [lit-ideas] Re: There's no such thing as a free cremation
Eric asks:In a serious light, is Omar's reply a performative statement? Do I have to feel mocked for it to be performative, or is it sufficient that Omar feels he mocked me?
They're highly context dependent: I can say, 'I
hereby sentence you...,' 'I christen this ship the S. S. Essex,' 'I nowpronounce you friend and foe,' etc., without uttering a performative, becausemy uttering these words doesn't do anything except disturb some nearby airmolecules. However, if said by judges, ship christeners and those licensed to bring it about, by speaking, that other people stand in certain relationships, they might be (unless they're spoken in a play or in rehearsal or in a dream.Suppose Omar were in a position to banish you from the polis, and uttered the proper words at the proper time in the proper way. It wouldn't matter whetheryou felt banished or not; with insulting and mocking, it might bebetter to say that he mocked you but (a) you didn't realize it or (b) you didn't care--didn't 'feel' mocked, and here there's a question about the 'force' of what someone said, not about whether it's a performative. For Austin, tteranceshave, minimally, a locutionary force, this being the bare articulation ofsomething meaningful in some natural language. Its illocutionary force would be its conventional effect: in saying this one is asking (answering) a question, informing someone, describing something--etc. (The 'etc.' stands for a pretty long list of things. The perlocutionary force of an utterance is its effect on its audience. These can be intended or not. In shouting 'Fire!' I might warn you (my intent) or frighten you (an un unintended effect). Of course, I could shout fire just to frighten you. Where are Omar's words and Eric's passions inall this? As Austin said, 'Here I leave, and commend the subject to you.' Robert Paul Mutton College ------------------------------------------------------------------ To change your Lit-Ideas settings (subscribe/unsub, vacation on/off, digest on/off), visit www.andreas.com/faq-lit-ideas.html
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