Title: Metaphor
1Lecture 21
2Traditional Literary Criticism
- In traditional literary criticism, metaphors are
distinguished from similes - A metaphor states that something is equivalent to
another thing which is not usually associated
with it. - A simile states that something is like another
thing which it is not usually associated with.
3Metaphor Simile Examples
- 'The man is a lion' is a metaphor, while
- 'The man is like a lion' is a simile.
4I. A. Richards tenor, vehicle and ground (a)
- Tenor is the thing that the metaphoric word or
phrase refers to. - Vehicle is the metaphoric word or phrase. In the
example above, - 'he' is the tenor, whilst
- 'lion' is the vehicle.
5I. A. Richards tenor, vehicle and ground (b)
- Ground is the quality that one refers to when
using a particular vehicle in relation to the
tenor for example, - the vehicle of the lion indicates that the tenor
('the man') possesses a quality or qualities that
one associates with the lion, such as braveness,
fierceness, having a voracious appetite, etc.
6Common in Everyday Language
- Metaphors -- quite common in language in general.
- However, many metaphors in everyday use are
described as dead metaphors, as they have been
used so frequently that their metaphorical
character has become less apparent.
7Metaphors in Everyday Language
- When one describes one's feelings as
- 'up' or 'down' or,
- when one describes oneself as
- 'fuming mad' or as 'bubbling with enthusiasm',
- one is using dead metaphors.
8Figure of Speech
- As you may know, a metaphor is a figure of
speech. - Other figures of speech
- metonymy and
- synecdoche.
9Metaphor Metonymy
- Almost as much as the distinction between
metaphor and simile, metaphor is quite often
distinguished from metonymy - A metonymy involves the association of one thing
with another which often occurs with or near it.
For example, - when one says that one wants to be away from
one's books for a while, it may indicate that one
wants to keep away from one's studies for a
while.
10Synecdoche
- Synecdoche involves the substitution of a part
for the whole, or the whole for a part. As such,
it has a connection to both meronymy and
hyponymy (which are dealt with in the 18th
lecture).
11Example of Synecdoche
- Taken from the Graham Greene story 'The Basement
Room' - We see the character Philip Lane viewing 'the
legs going up and down beyond the railings',
which indicates that he sees people rather than
disembodied legs moving up and down beyond the
railings, although the description here also
indicates that his vision is limited to their
legs rather than their whole bodies.
12Meronymy Hyponymy
- Graham Greene example has a relationship to
meronymy. - In relation to hyponymy, we have an example of
synecdoche when someone says, instead of - 'John had gone into the room and drank the only
bottle of Coke that I had', ? - 'A living being had gone into the room and drank
the only bottle of Coke that I had'.
13Halliday's Approach
- What is not metaphorical -- congruent.
- Historical factor
14Metaphors of transitivity (1)
- Quite productive in stylistic analysis eg.
- In the Marianne Moore poem which was analysed in
an earlier lecture, the mind which 'walks along
with its eyes on the ground' is quite clearly
metaphorical, as one refers to the (mental
process) act of seeing rather than the actual
(material process) act of walking.
15Metaphors of transitivity (2)
- Another example -- Judith Wright poem
- The 'flame of light in the dew' and the 'flame
of blood on the bush' which 'answered the
whirling sun' (my italics). - It is clear here that the act of answering (a
verbal process) can only be performed by a being
who is capable of using language, and if the
'flame of light' and the 'flame of blood' do
this act, then the word answer, in relation to
transitivity, is used metaphorically.
16Metaphors of transitivity (3)
- In the extract from Peter Carey's Oscar and
Lucinda -- - The word 'lodged' in the idea 'that lucinda
herself had lodged in his head' and - The verbs 'make' and 'stick' in 'she had done
everything possible to make the idea stick', - Are metaphorical in relation to transitivity, as
they are supposed to be material processes when
viewed congruently, but are apparently not used
as such in the passage.
17Lexical Density
- Usually productive in one's interpretation in
stylistic analysis when it touches on the broad
distinction between written and spoken language. - Definition the number of words per sentence
- The more lexically dense a text is, the more
number of words there are in each sentence.
18Lexical Density Usefulness
- You may find lexical density quite useful in your
interpretation if it is considered together with
nominalisation (the conversion of another
lexical category to a noun).
19Lexical Density Usefulness, Example
- The following text
- I considered the option. I didn't take it I was
uncertain if it would benefit me. - is converted to the following more lexically
dense written version - The option was a consideration, but I did not
take it because of the uncertainty of its benefit
to me.
20Interpersonal Metaphors (1)
- According to Halliday, one way by which the
interpersonal features of language may be
metaphorised is by 'dressing the modality
feature up as a proposition' (p. 333, 355).
21Interpersonal Metaphors (2)
- Meaning of 'dressing the modality feature up as
a proposition' - Projection is involved when the interpersonal
feature of language is metaphorised. - The projecting clause involved usually has a word
or proposition which signifies belief,
likelihood, certainty, etc. -- connection with
modality.
22Interpersonal Metaphors (3)
- Halliday's example,
- 'probably that pudding never will be cooked'
- is congruent, whilst
- 'I don't believe that pudding ever will be
cooked' - is metaphorical, as the feature of modality is
found in the main clause.
23Interpersonal Metaphors (4)
- In the following sentence, the two hypotactic
clause complexes linked by the conjunction 'but'
are metaphorical, as they involve the word
'think' - I do not myself think that this will happen in
the next war, but I think it may well happen in
the next but one, if that is allowed to occur.
24Another Type Of Interpersonal Metaphor (1)
- Associated with speech acts
- (Austinian) perlocutionary acts or (Searlean)
illocutionary force of a proposition - Halliday's example is the statement
- I wouldn't do this if I was you,
- which does seem to have the congruent force of an
imperative - 'Don't do it!'.
25Another Type Of Interpersonal Metaphor (2)
- In literary works, a rhetorical question is quite
often a metaphorical question which serves the
congruent function of making a declarative
statement. For example, Shakespeare's - 'Shall I compare thee to a summer's day . . . ?'
- can be congruently translated to a conditional
declarative clause 'If I compare thee to a
summer's day'
26Shakespeares Sonnet no. 56
- Sweet love, renew thy force be it not said
- Thy edge should blunter be than appetite,
- Which but today by feeding is allayed,
- Tomorrow sharpened in his former might.
Vocative Love is not an abstraction has human
qualities
Use of second person pronouns again, personifies
love
Transitivity metaphor
27Another vocative
Use of second person pronouns again, personifies
love
- So, love, be thou although today thou fill
- Thy hungry eyes even till they wink with
fullness, - Tomorrow see again, and do not kill
- The spirit of love with a perpetual dullness.
Love now has a face
Imperatives Implication that the poem is
addressed the (personified) 2nd person
28Simile
- Let this sad interim like the ocean be
- Which parts the shore where two contracted new
- Come daily to the banks, that, when they see
- Return of love, more blest be the view
- As call it winter, which being full of
care - Makes summer's welcome thrice more wished,
more rare
Transitivity metaphor
29Extract from Dickens Our Mutual Friend
- Little Miss Peecher, from her little official
dwelling-house, with its little windows like the
eyes in needles, and its little doors like the
covers of school-books, was very observant indeed
of the object of her quiet affections. Love,
though said to be afflicted with blindness, is a
vigilant watchman, and Miss Peecher kept him on
double duty over
30- Mr. Bradley Headstone. It was not that she was
naturally given to playing the spy -- it was not
that she was at all secret, plotting, or mean --
it was simply that she loved the unresponsive
Bradley with all the primitive and homely stock
of love that had never been examined or
certificated out of her. If her faithful slate
had had the latent
31- qualities of sympathetic paper, and its pencil
those of invisible ink, many a little treatise
calculated to astonish the pupils would come
bursting through the dry Peecher's bosom. For,
oftentimes when school was not, and her calm
leisure and calm little house were her own, Miss
Peecher would commit to the confidential
32- slate an imaginary description of how, upon a
balmy evening at dusk, two figures might have
been observed in the market-garden grounded round
the corner, of whom one, being a manly form, bent
over the other, being a womanly form of short
stature and some compactness, and
33- breathed in a low voice the words, ''Emma
Peecher, wilt thou be my own?" after which the
womanly form's head reposed upon the manly form's
shoulder, and the nightingales tuned up. Though
all unseen and unsuspected by the pupils, Bradley
Headstone even pervaded the school exercises. Was
Geography in question? He
34- would come triumphantly flying out of Vesuvius
and Atna ahead of the lava, and would boil
unharmed in the hot springs of Iceland, and would
float majestically down the Ganges and the Nile.
Did History chronicle a king of men? Behind him
in pepper-and-salt pantaloons, with his
watch-guard round his neck. Were copies to be
written? In capital B's and H's most of
35- the girls under Miss Peecher's tuition were
half a year ahead of every other letter in the
alphabet. And Mental Arithmetic, administered by
Miss Peecher, often devoted itself to providing
Bradley Headstone with a wardrobe of fabulous
extent fourscore and four neck-ties at two and
ninepence-halfpenny, two gross of
36- silver watches at four pounds fifteen
andsixpence, seventy-four black at eighteen
shillings and many similar superfluities.
37- The vigilant watchman, using his daily
opportunities of turning his eyes in Bradley's
direction, soon apprized Miss Peecher that
Bradley was more preoccupied than had been his
wont and more given to strolling about with a
downcast and reserved face, turning something
difficult in his mind that was not in the
scholastic syllabus. Putting
38- this and that together -- combining under the
head "this," present appearances and the intimacy
with Charley Hexam, and ranging under the head
"that" the visit to his sister, the watchman
reported to Miss Peecher his strong suspicions
that the sister was at the bottom of it.