A brief introduction to the work of

M.A.K. Halliday and Systemic-Functional Linguistics

 

M.A.K. Halliday has sought to create an approach to linguistics that treats language as foundational for the building of human experience. His insights and publications form an approach called systemic-functional linguistics. A student of JR Firth (a British linguists who himself was influenced by Malinowsky), Halliday's work stresses that language cannot be dissassociated from meaning. Systemic-functional linguistics (SFL), as its name suggests, considers function and semantics as the basis of human language and communicative activity. Unlike structural approaches that privilege syntax, SFL-oriented linguists begin an analysis with social context and then look at how language acts upon, and is constrained and influenced by, this social context. A key concept in Halliday's approach is the "context of situation" which obtains "through a systematic relationship between the social environment on the one hand, and the functional organization of language on the other" (Halliday, 1985:11).

 

DESCRIPTION and TERMS for analysing SPOKEN and WRITTEN LANGUAGE

 

SYSTEMIC SEMANTICS: TEXTUAL, INTERPERSONAL, and IDEATIONAL aspects of LANGUAGE

 

The ANALYSIS of CONTEXT is broken down into FIELD, TENOR, AND MODE, which collectively constitute the "register" of a text (from Halliday, 1985:12)

 

Recommended READINGS and WEBSITES

What is Systemic-Functional Lingustics? , maintained by Mick O'Donnell.

Some notes on Systemic-Functional linguistics, by Carol Chapelle

A glossary of Systemic-Functional Terms, by Christian Matthiessen

Select Bibliographies of Systemic Functional Linguistics, compiled by M.A.K. Halliday, Christian M.I.M. Matthiessen & Alice Caffarel

Halliday, M.A.K., & Hasan, R. (1985). Language, context, and text: aspects of language in a social-semiotic perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Halliday, M.A.K. (1985). Spoken and written language. Oxford: Oxford University Press.


 

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