|
| Journal
of Language and Literature Volume 3 Number 1 2004 ISSN 1478 - 9116 |
On the Use of Marked Syntax in
Four Short Stories Written by Hispanic American Writers: A Functional Perspective
María Martínez Lirola
University
of Alicante, Spain
| Abstract We are going to analyse the main syntactical processes of thematization and postponement in English in four short stories written by four different Hispanic American writers who wrote around the seventies: Rudolfo Anaya's The Force of Luck, Denise Chávez's Evening in Paris, Alberto Álvaro Ríos' My Father and the Snow and Ana Castillo's My Mother's Mexico. The main purpose of this article is to show that presenting certain important facts in the short stories using several marked syntactical structures in English (extraposition, existential sentences, pseudo-cleft sentences, passive, cleft sentences) is not at random because those structures have specific communicative implications as we will see with the analysis of the corpus of examples. We will also prove that these Chicano writers create a social reality throughout the recurrent use of these processes or express deep feelings since the use of the anomalous syntactical processes under analysis points out a contrast with the normal SVO order of the English sentence.
Systemic Functional Grammar, marked syntactical processes, discourse
analysis, context, Chicano literature. |
About
the Author
María Martínez Lirola holds a PhD in English Philology. She taught Bilingual Language Arts for a year at Deming High School, New Mexico, USA. Her present areas of research are ESL and Text Linguistics. Since October 2002, she has been working as Assistant Professor at the University of Alicante in Spain. She lectures on Grammar, English, Text Linguistics and the PhD course: The Relationship between Language, Context and Text. An Introduction to Halliday's Systemic Functional Grammar.
Email: maria.lirola@ua.es