Speech Act Theory
Speech Act Theory
Speech Act Theory
Group 402
Anna Raichuk
Kyiv 2014
The contemporary use of the term “speech act” goes back to J. L. Austin's
development of performative utterances and his theory of locutionary,
illocutionary, and perlocutionary acts. Speech acts are commonly taken to include
such acts as promising, ordering, greeting, warning, inviting and congratulating.
That is, speech acts are simply things people do through language – for
example, apologizing, instructing, menacing, explaining something, etc.
John Austin is the person who is usually credited with generating interest in
what has since come to be known as pragmatics and speech act theory. His first
step was to show that some utterances are not statements or questions but actions.
After introducing several kinds of sentences which he asserts are neither true nor
false, he turns in particular to one of these kinds of sentences, which he calls
performative utterances or just "performatives". These he characterises by two
features:
Again, though they may take the form of a typical indicative sentence,
performative sentences are not used to describe (or "constate") and are thus not
true or false; they have no truth-value.
Second, to utter one of these sentences in appropriate circumstances is
not just to "say" something, but rather to perform a certain kind of action.
Following the usage of, for example, John R. Searle, "speech act" is often
meant to refer just to the same thing as the term illocutionary act, which John L.
Austin had originally introduced in How to Do Things with Words (published
posthumously in 1962). Searle's work on speech acts is also commonly understood
to refine Austin's conception. However, some philosophers have pointed out a
significant difference between the two conceptions: whereas Austin emphasized
the conventional interpretation of speech acts, Searle emphasized a psychological
interpretation (based on beliefs, intentions, etc.).
Indirect speech acts are commonly used to reject proposals and to make
requests. For example, a speaker asks, "Would you like to meet me for coffee?"
and another replies, "I have class." The second speaker used an indirect speech act
to reject the proposal. This is indirect because the literal meaning of "I have class"
does not entail any sort of rejection.
This poses a problem for linguists because it is confusing (on a rather simple
approach) to see how the person who made the proposal can understand that his
proposal was rejected. Following substantially an account of H. P. Grice, Searle
suggests that we are able to derive meaning out of indirect speech acts by means of
a cooperative process out of which we are able to derive multiple illocutions;
however, the process he proposes does not seem to accurately solve the problem.
In other words this means that one does not need to say the words apologize,
pledge, or praise in order to show they are doing the action. All the examples
above show how the actions and indirect words make something happen rather
than coming out straightforward with specific words and saying it.