Halliday's model of register revisited and explored
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peer-review
Halliday’s description of register as ‘a variety of language, corresponding to a variety of situation’, with situation interpreted ‘by means of a conceptual framework using the terms “field”, “tenor” and “mode”’ (Halliday, 1985/89: 29, 38) is revisited to reflect on the theoretical work the term ‘register’ does within the SFL paradigm. In doing so, we recognise that the concepts of a linguistic theory are ‘ineffable’ (Halliday 2002[1988]); i.e. that ‘providing definitions of a theoretical term... requires that it be positioned vis-à-vis other concepts in the theory’ (Hasan, 2004: 16). It follows that changing the position of ‘register’ in the theory changes the nature of the concept. So while alternative uses of the term ‘register’ – such as in Martin’s genre model (e.g. 1992) and Halliday’s model – may advance a shared program for language description and explanation as a route to social change, they must be seen as more than terminological variants. One consequence of the productivity of Martin’s approach has been that the Hallidayan line of register theory has not had sufficient critical explication. This paper therefore begins with a brief review of the register concept. It then exemplifies the term, as postulated by Halliday, with a registerial analysis of surgical interaction, drawing on Hasan’s context modelling (e.g. Hasan 1995, 2004, 2009a), and adopting what Matthiessen (1993) calls a ‘metafunctional slice’ with ‘multistratal coverage’. By accounting for choice at different strata, we seek to ‘relate wording to context via meaning which acts as the interface between the two’ (Hasan 2009a: 182).
Original language
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English
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Pages (from-to)
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187-213
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Number of pages
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27
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Journal
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Linguistics and the human sciences
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Volume
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4
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Issue number
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2
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Publication status
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Published -
2008
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@article{840fbd6b000d47b8a440db26b15c92ce,
title = "Halliday's model of register revisited and explored",
abstract = "Halliday{\textquoteright}s description of register as {\textquoteleft}a variety of language, corresponding to a variety of situation{\textquoteright}, with situation interpreted {\textquoteleft}by means of a conceptual framework using the terms “field”, “tenor” and “mode”{\textquoteright} (Halliday, 1985/89: 29, 38) is revisited to reflect on the theoretical work the term {\textquoteleft}register{\textquoteright} does within the SFL paradigm. In doing so, we recognise that the concepts of a linguistic theory are {\textquoteleft}ineffable{\textquoteright} (Halliday 2002[1988]); i.e. that {\textquoteleft}providing definitions of a theoretical term... requires that it be positioned vis-{\`a}-vis other concepts in the theory{\textquoteright} (Hasan, 2004: 16). It follows that changing the position of {\textquoteleft}register{\textquoteright} in the theory changes the nature of the concept. So while alternative uses of the term {\textquoteleft}register{\textquoteright} – such as in Martin{\textquoteright}s genre model (e.g. 1992) and Halliday{\textquoteright}s model – may advance a shared program for language description and explanation as a route to social change, they must be seen as more than terminological variants. One consequence of the productivity of Martin{\textquoteright}s approach has been that the Hallidayan line of register theory has not had sufficient critical explication. This paper therefore begins with a brief review of the register concept. It then exemplifies the term, as postulated by Halliday, with a registerial analysis of surgical interaction, drawing on Hasan{\textquoteright}s context modelling (e.g. Hasan 1995, 2004, 2009a), and adopting what Matthiessen (1993) calls a {\textquoteleft}metafunctional slice{\textquoteright} with {\textquoteleft}multistratal coverage{\textquoteright}. By accounting for choice at different strata, we seek to {\textquoteleft}relate wording to context via meaning which acts as the interface between the two{\textquoteright} (Hasan 2009a: 182).",
keywords = "register, context, systemic functional linguistics, medical discourse, probabilistic modelling",
author = "Annabelle Lukin and Alison Moore and Maria Herke and Rebekah Wegener and Canzhong Wu",
year = "2008",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "187--213",
journal = "Linguistics and the human sciences",
issn = "1742-2906",
publisher = "Equinox Publishing",
number = "2",
}
Lukin, A
, Moore, A
, Herke, M
, Wegener, R & Wu, C 2008, '
Halliday's model of register revisited and explored
',
Linguistics and the human sciences
, vol. 4, no. 2, pp. 187-213.
TY - JOUR
T1 - Halliday's model of register revisited and explored
AU - Lukin, Annabelle
AU - Moore, Alison
AU - Herke, Maria
AU - Wegener, Rebekah
AU - Wu, Canzhong
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Halliday’s description of register as ‘a variety of language, corresponding to a variety of situation’, with situation interpreted ‘by means of a conceptual framework using the terms “field”, “tenor” and “mode”’ (Halliday, 1985/89: 29, 38) is revisited to reflect on the theoretical work the term ‘register’ does within the SFL paradigm. In doing so, we recognise that the concepts of a linguistic theory are ‘ineffable’ (Halliday 2002[1988]); i.e. that ‘providing definitions of a theoretical term... requires that it be positioned vis-à-vis other concepts in the theory’ (Hasan, 2004: 16). It follows that changing the position of ‘register’ in the theory changes the nature of the concept. So while alternative uses of the term ‘register’ – such as in Martin’s genre model (e.g. 1992) and Halliday’s model – may advance a shared program for language description and explanation as a route to social change, they must be seen as more than terminological variants. One consequence of the productivity of Martin’s approach has been that the Hallidayan line of register theory has not had sufficient critical explication. This paper therefore begins with a brief review of the register concept. It then exemplifies the term, as postulated by Halliday, with a registerial analysis of surgical interaction, drawing on Hasan’s context modelling (e.g. Hasan 1995, 2004, 2009a), and adopting what Matthiessen (1993) calls a ‘metafunctional slice’ with ‘multistratal coverage’. By accounting for choice at different strata, we seek to ‘relate wording to context via meaning which acts as the interface between the two’ (Hasan 2009a: 182).
AB - Halliday’s description of register as ‘a variety of language, corresponding to a variety of situation’, with situation interpreted ‘by means of a conceptual framework using the terms “field”, “tenor” and “mode”’ (Halliday, 1985/89: 29, 38) is revisited to reflect on the theoretical work the term ‘register’ does within the SFL paradigm. In doing so, we recognise that the concepts of a linguistic theory are ‘ineffable’ (Halliday 2002[1988]); i.e. that ‘providing definitions of a theoretical term... requires that it be positioned vis-à-vis other concepts in the theory’ (Hasan, 2004: 16). It follows that changing the position of ‘register’ in the theory changes the nature of the concept. So while alternative uses of the term ‘register’ – such as in Martin’s genre model (e.g. 1992) and Halliday’s model – may advance a shared program for language description and explanation as a route to social change, they must be seen as more than terminological variants. One consequence of the productivity of Martin’s approach has been that the Hallidayan line of register theory has not had sufficient critical explication. This paper therefore begins with a brief review of the register concept. It then exemplifies the term, as postulated by Halliday, with a registerial analysis of surgical interaction, drawing on Hasan’s context modelling (e.g. Hasan 1995, 2004, 2009a), and adopting what Matthiessen (1993) calls a ‘metafunctional slice’ with ‘multistratal coverage’. By accounting for choice at different strata, we seek to ‘relate wording to context via meaning which acts as the interface between the two’ (Hasan 2009a: 182).
KW - register
KW - context
KW - systemic functional linguistics
KW - medical discourse
KW - probabilistic modelling
M3 - Article
SN - 1742-2906
VL - 4
SP - 187
EP - 213
JO - Linguistics and the human sciences
JF - Linguistics and the human sciences
IS - 2
ER -
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