Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7297874 Journal of Pragmatics 2016 17 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper provides an operational framework to study the unfolding of new factual propositions out of originally suspended-factual (Narrog, 2009, Tantucci, 2015b) statements during a speech event. In particular, this model is centred on the dynamic relationship between cognitive control (i.e. Kan et al., 2013) and epistemic certainty. A speaker/writer's epistemic inclination towards the factuality of a proposition P occurs throughout a text, either in the form of the assertive reformulation of an originally suspended-factual proposition P, or in the form of a presupposition trigger also turning P into a new factual statement. I refer to this phenomenon as textual factualization (TF) and I provide corpus data from the British National Corpus (BNC) to demonstrate it to be a frequent mechanism where an originally suspended-factual proposition [apparently P] is subsequently factualized both in written and spoken texts. I argue that TF instantiates as a form of interference/misinformation effect (cf. Ecker et al., 2015) as it triggers the qualitative alteration of an event memory by partially overwriting an original memory trace: from [apparently P] to [apparently P].
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
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