Žagar / Grgic | How to Do Things with Tense and Aspect | Buch | 978-1-4438-3212-0 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 155 Seiten

Žagar / Grgic

How to Do Things with Tense and Aspect

Performativity before Austin
1. Auflage 2011
ISBN: 978-1-4438-3212-0
Verlag: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Performativity before Austin

Buch, Englisch, 155 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-4438-3212-0
Verlag: Cambridge Scholars Publishing


Almost all verbs in Slovene (one of the least researched Slavic languages) have two aspectually different forms, the perfective (PF) and the imperfective (IF). But in institutional settings or settings strongly marked with social hierarchy, only the second, the imperfective form, is used by Slovene speakers in a performative sense.

Why is that? And what, in fact, has a Slovene speaker said if (s)he has used the imperfective verb in “performative circumstances”? No doubt that (s)he may be in the process of accomplishing such an act. But at the same time, having the possibility of choosing between the PF and the IF form, (s)he may have also indicated that this act hasn’t been accomplished (yet): as long as we are only promising (IF), we have not really promised anything yet, and if we are only promising (IF), we cannot take anything as having been really promised. That was how Stanislav Škrabec, the 19th century Slovene linguist and the central figure of this book, saw the role of verbal aspect within language use.

Being caught in such a dilemma, a question inevitably arises: how do we accomplish an act of promise (or any other performative act) in Slovene? That dilemma – whether to use the perfective or imperfective aspect when accomplishing performative acts – may seem more than artificial at first, but it was very much alive among Slovene linguists at the end of the 19th century. And it was that very dilemma that quite unexpectedly gave rise to the foundations of performativity in Slovene, half a century before Austin!

In the present book, the authors try to shed light on this controversy that involved different Slovene scholars for about thirty years, and propose a delocutive hypothesis as a solution for the performative dilemma this controversy unveiled.
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Weitere Infos & Material


Igor Ž. Žagar studied philosophy, sociology and linguistics in Ljubljana, Paris and Antwerp. He is Professor of Rhetoric and Argumentation, and a Senior Research Fellow (Head of the Center for Discourse Studies) at the Educational Research Institute, Ljubljana, Slovenia.

Matejka Grgic studied philosophy and Slovene language in Trieste and Ljubljana. She worked as a Teaching Assistant at the University of Primorska, and as an Assistant Professor at the University of Nova Gorica. She has been the Scientific Director of the Slovene Educational Consortium in Gorizia, Italy since 2008. Grgic publishes in the fields of semiotics and philosophy of language.


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