The Conceptualization of Language Analysis from the Perspective of Sociolinguistics: The Shift from Langue to Parole
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2016-11-14
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of eloued جامعة الوادي
Abstract
Since the second half of the twentieth century, the conceptualization of language analysis
has been revisited several times. Modern Structuralism, for instance, focused on the study of
langue rather than parole. Their justification is that the former is a self-contained system or
social product of the faculty of speech deposited in the brains of individuals as a result of
numerous experiences of listening to other persons. However, parole is the manifestation of
that faculty in speech. On its part, Mentalistic linguistics though viewing that individuals are
predisposed with language, almost maintained the same dichotomy leading to competence
and performance. Since all language irregularities occur in performance, this trend
emphasizes that language study should focus on competence. However, since the early
seventies the pendulum of language analysis has fallen in favor of parole. Criticizing the
failure of structural and mentalistic linguistics to account for the social, physical and
temporal situations that language activity is taking place in, the father of sociolinguistics,
Dell Hymes (1972b) proposed a model of communicative competence comprising four
sectors: possibility (langue/competence), feasibility (psycholinguistic aspect),
appropriateness (context) and the frequency of occurrences of speech acts. This paper
attempts to trace the conceptualization of language analysis from the perspective of
sociolinguistics.
Description
Colloque international : 14, 15, 16 Novembre 2016 La linguistique 100 ans après le Cours de Saussure: Bilans et perspectives Université Alger 2
Keywords
langue, parole, competence, performance, communicative competence