关于leech礼貌原则的翻译

若能提供相关英文资料也可,非常感谢!
Grice认为,在语言交际过程中,交际双方必须合作,遵循“合作原则”的四项准则,以最直接的方式、最高的效率进行交际。但在实际交际中人们往往有意违反其中某项准则,以获得特殊的会话含义。合作原则未能解释人们为何要拐弯抹角地说话。为此,英国著名语言学家Leech提出了“礼貌原则”,以此作为合作原则的补充。
Leech指出,人们为了不直截了当地触及对方的“面子”,只能拐弯抹角、含蓄间接地表达其真实的信息,而让听者自己去理解他的“言外之意”。礼貌原则就是在其他条件相同的情况下,把不礼貌的信念减弱到最低限度。把一些对听话人或第三者来说不礼貌的话,或是略去不说或是婉转间接地说出来[6]。礼貌原则要求人们在交际中尽量减少有损他人的、有利自己的观点;尽量减少对他人的贬低,对自己的赞赏;尽量减少对他人观点的不一致和感情的对立。概括地说,礼貌原则就是在其他条件相同的情况下,把不礼貌的信念减弱到最低限度,把一些对听话人或第三者来说是不礼貌的话,或是略去不说,或是婉转、间接地说出来。

第1个回答  2008-02-26
Politeness Principle and the hypocrisy of human kind
Politeness is one of the major social constraints on human interaction regulating participants' communicative behavior by constantly reminding them to take into consideration the feelings of the others.

(He Zi'ran 2003)

Leech (1983) proposed the Politeness Principle which is formulated in a general way from 2 aspects:

1) to minimize the expression of impolite beliefs

2) to maximize the expression of polite beliefs

The Politeness Principle encompasses six maxims: Tact maxim, Generosity maxim, Approbation maxim, Modesty maxim, Agreement maxim and Sympathy maxim.

Apparently, as He Zi'ran mentioned, it is necessary to consider the hearer's feelings in order to establish a mutual rapport between the conversationers. Human is really a face-wanting animal (face is Goffman (1959)'s term originated from Chinese). According to Goffman, face is a sacred thing for every human being, an essential factor communicators have to pay attention to. Face wants are reciprocal, that is, if one wants her face cared for, she should care for other people's face.

The problem is that Leech naively (in an unoffensive way) believed that most people will stick to these six maxims in verbal interations, or even other human interations.

Here is my interrogation: how motivated is every human being in saving others' face? Honestly, I would say that I am not a highly motivated face-saving human being. And I guess that there must be a large amount of people who would agree with me. I think the truth is, most people are reluctant in saving others' face or considering others' feelings, because saving others' face may cost too much of their own face, which is contradictory to the claim that every human being wants her/ his face. Oh, this might look like a logical fallacy. But just suppose in particular contexts, for example, a guy just goes bankrupt and loses his girlfriend at the same day, how likely will he considering his friends' feelings when they (with the disasters unknown)are speaking in dispraise of his taste?

So, the most possible situations when the Politeness Principle is used would be those hypocritical situations where the speaker and the hearer both want something from each other (this sounds really evil, right?). But not all people use the PP for this double-dealing purpose. Or does this kind of purpose of being polite happen only among hypocritical people? Or do all kinds of people actually keep this purpose in their mind and pretend that they are polite to others?

People can cover themselves well under the politeness strategies they use. After all, this article is a summary of my daydreams that i had when attending pragmatics lectures.

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最近评论
molly:支持。
17:其实发生了很多事,每天都有各式各样的事情发生,永远没有结局,就好象电视剧,一个事情的结束也是另一个事情的开始。

太多太多时候的想法太乱了,以致没有办法写出来,不过这些在心里都是一个过程。

累吧?好好休息一下吧。
adah:这期间碰到好多障碍,有客观的有主观的,自己心里也很乱,再加上最近也很懒,也没时间整理心情,可能要缓冲一段时间我才写得出比较好的文字吧。
susan:美女,自从拍拖后你就不写blog了
为什么不写写恋爱中的感受呢?you are such a little girl.;)
牛牛:我以前读过一篇文章,Susan Bordo的The Male Body(重新发现男性身体的美),里面很多论述如何重新定义男性身体和如今社会对身体的错误认识,很文化很女权主义的一篇论述。可惜找不到中文版本的,在网上也很难找到关于这篇文章的资料。现在的男人也开始越来越担心自己的身体了呢!
http://employees.oneonta.edu/farberas/ARTH/arth200……
Politeness Principle and the hypocrisy of human kind
Politeness is one of the major social constraints on human interaction regulating participants' communicative behavior by constantly reminding them to take into consideration the feelings of the others.

(He Zi'ran 2003)

Leech (1983) proposed the Politeness Principle which is formulated in a general way from 2 aspects:

1) to minimize the expression of impolite beliefs

2) to maximize the expression of polite beliefs

The Politeness Principle encompasses six maxims: Tact maxim, Generosity maxim, Approbation maxim, Modesty maxim, Agreement maxim and Sympathy maxim.

Apparently, as He Zi'ran mentioned, it is necessary to consider the hearer's feelings in order to establish a mutual rapport between the conversationers. Human is really a face-wanting animal (face is Goffman (1959)'s term originated from Chinese). According to Goffman, face is a sacred thing for every human being, an essential factor communicators have to pay attention to. Face wants are reciprocal, that is, if one wants her face cared for, she should care for other people's face.

The problem is that Leech naively (in an unoffensive way) believed that most people will stick to these six maxims in verbal interations, or even other human interations.

Here is my interrogation: how motivated is every human being in saving others' face? Honestly, I would say that I am not a highly motivated face-saving human being. And I guess that there must be a large amount of people who would agree with me. I think the truth is, most people are reluctant in saving others' face or considering others' feelings, because saving others' face may cost too much of their own face, which is contradictory to the claim that every human being wants her/ his face. Oh, this might look like a logical fallacy. But just suppose in particular contexts, for example, a guy just goes bankrupt and loses his girlfriend at the same day, how likely will he considering his friends' feelings when they (with the disasters unknown)are speaking in dispraise of his taste?

So, the most possible situations when the Politeness Principle is used would be those hypocritical situations where the speaker and the hearer both want something from each other (this sounds really evil, right?). But not all people use the PP for this double-dealing purpose. Or does this kind of purpose of being polite happen only among hypocritical people? Or do all kinds of people actually keep this purpose in their mind and pretend that they are polite to others?

People can cover themselves well under the politeness strategies they use. After all, this article is a summary of my daydreams that i had when attending pragmatics lectures.

http://blog.donews.com/adah/archive/2005/05/26/398194.aspx

To avoid the possible confusion caused by the literal meaning of “implication”, Grice introduces the “implicature” and “conversational implicature”, which refers to “the implications which can be deduced from the form of an utterance, on the basis of certain co-operative principle which governs the efficiency and normal acceptability of conversations.” After mentioning the particular word “say” and conventional meaning of sentences, Grice emphasizes a whole system with four categories , which develops into nine specific maxims or sub-maxims:
(1) Maxim of Quantity
1 Make your contribution as informative as is required (for the current purpose of the exchange).
2 Do not make your contribution more informative than is required.
(2) Maxim of Quality
Super-maxim: try to make your contribution one that is true.
1 Do not say what is you believe to be false.
2 Do not say what for which you lack adequate evidence.
(3) Maxim of Relation
Be relevant.
(4) Maxim of Manner
1 Avoid obscurity of expression.
2 Avoid ambiguity.
3 Be brief (avoid unnecessary prolixity).
4 Be orderly.
Grice realizes some disputable elements in his system himself, and it turns to be some points of his theory of conversational implicature that are argued heartily by other linguists.
Since Grice’s theory of implicature was brought about, whose freshness and significance were recognized immediately by the linguists, most of whom valued highly of them. However, it seems apparent that certain redundancy and even contradiction exist in the theoretical structure, so there appears plenty of criticisms; for example, some linguistics scholars point out the inexactness of the formulations of conversational implicature and the quite doubtful real significance that is related to the inexactness. Some of the criticisms are reasonably based on profound study and deeply analysis of Grice and his theory of conversational implicature. Now, instead of presenting an endless list of sound or unfair criticisms, it is useful for us to look into some key modifications of Grice’s theory of conversational formulas proposed by several contemporary linguists.
Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson consider the Gricean maxim to be too redundant. Their view on the communication is that
“--- more psychological point of view, defining communication is not a primary concern. --- Our aim is to identify underlying mechanisms, rooted in human psychology, which explain how humans communicate with one another. A psychologically well-founded definition and typology of communication, if possible at all, should follow from a theoretical account of these underlying mechanisms.”
From this perspective, they point out the defect of Grice’s view on communication, “--- the main defect of Grice’s analysis is not that it defines communication too vaguely, but that it explains communication too poorly.” (ib, id) According to the theory of inference, communication refers to the audience trying to recognize the speaker’s informative intention. However, you cannot say that recognizing intentions is a formal feature of human cognition, and the awareness of that communication is not only a recognizing behavior. The recognition of informative intentions presents problems, which the recognition of other human intentions does not. Besides, Grice, talking only of verbal communication, argues,
“Our talk exchanges --- are characteristically, to some degree at least, cooperative efforts; and each participant recognizes in them, to some extent, a common or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction --- at each stage, some possible conversational moves would be excluded as conversationally unsuitable. We might then formulate a rough general principle which participants will be expected to observe, namely: Make your conversational contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged.”
This is Grice’s co-operative principle, which is developed into nine maxims classified into four categories. This account of the general standards governing verbal communication makes it possible to explain how the utterance of a sentence, which provides only an incomplete and ambiguous representation of a thought, can nevertheless express a complete and unambiguous thought. Of the various thoughts, the audience need not consider any that are incompatible with the assumption, in which the speaker is obeying the co-operative principle and maxims. If only one thought is left, them the hearer can infer that it is this thought that the speaker is trying to communicate. Thus, to communicate efficiently, all speaker is has to do is utter a sentence only one interpretation of which is compatible with the assumption that he is obeying the co-operative principle and maxims. For example, lets see the following dialogue:
(1) A: Do you want some coffee?
B: Coffee would keep me awake.
(2) B does not want to stay awake.
(3) B does not want any coffee.
Suppose that A is aware of (1). Then from the assumption expressed by B’s answer, add it to the assumption (2), he could infer conclusion (3). Grice seems to think that the hearer uses the assumption that the speaker has observed the maxims as a premise in inference. Others have tried to reinterpret the maxim as code-like rules, and yield pragmatic representations of utterances as output (Gazdar 1979). Let’s see Gazdar’s proposal from the following remarks:
“The tactic adopted here is to examine some of the data that would, or should be, covered by Grice’s quantity maxim and then propose a relatively simple formal solution to the problem of describing the behavior of that data. This solution may be seen as a special case of Grice’s quantity maxim, or as an alternative to it, or as merely a conventional rule for assigning one class of conversational meanings to one class of utterance.”
Grice’s view on implicature raises many basic questions. What is the rationale behind the co-operative principle and maxims? Are there just the nine maxims Grice mentioned, or might others be needed, as he suggests himself? Now lets analyze the last part of Grice’s principle of Quality, which is widely argued ever since it appeared. In his essay “Logic and Conversation”, Grice puts two maxims under the principle of Quantity:
1 Make your contribution as informative as is required (for the current purpose of the exchange).
2 Do not make your contribution more informative than is required. (Grice, 1975)
Grice himself admits in the paper that it is disputable whether the second maxim of the principle of Quantity is needed or not because of that: on the one hand, over-informative is merely a waste of time, but providing more information is not transgression of the Co-operative Principle; on the other hand, it is possible that such over-informativeness may be confusing, and it is likely to raise misunderstandings or aside issues; To prevent this kind of inefficiency of conversation, we prefer obeying the Principle of Relation to the second maxim of Quantity. As to the Principle of Relation, Grice recognizes many problems existing in its formulation, “Though the maxim itself is terse, its formulation conceals a number of problems that exercise me a good deal: questions about what different kinds and focuses of relevance there may be, how these shift in the course of a talk exchange, how to allow for the fact that subjects of conversation are legitimately changed, and so on.” However, he considers that those problems are so difficult that he could only leave them to his latter research. Grice’s uncertainty of the Principle of Relation leaves large room for later linguists to rearrange the maxims by their own theory.
As an example, Sperber and Wilson put the second maxim of Quantity under a principle of relevance ---- as Grice predicts at the very beginning of his article on Conversational Implicature comes out in public someone may do this. Sperber and Wilson seem to be a little too enthusiastic about the possible overlap in Grice’s theory to notice the complication of conversation, and consequently over-simplify Grice’s principle of Quantity. Laurence Horn recognizes that language in use cannot be that simple; he tries to replace all the Grice’s maxims of conversation by his Q-principle and I-principle, but he is unable to explain the principle of Quality. Horn’s Q-principle and I-principle shows us that he thinks in a typical two-side way. In this aspect, Horn differs from Sperber and Wilson’s single-mindedly focus on Relevance, which is too extreme. However, the balance kept by Horn is still far from the intricateness of real conversation. Both the extreme “Relevance” of Sperber and Wilson and Horn’s two-sided theory of Q-principle and I-principle are simple enough to fit into a clearly organized structure, but how can the real meaning and utility remain in an over-simplified theory? Unlike Sperber, Wilson and Horn, Levinson treats Grice’s theory of Co-operative principle much more correctly; he comparatively has a more serious attitude and constructs a more complex system of maxims. He sets the second maxim of Grice’s principle of quantity as a separate principle, and calls it “Principle of Informativeness”. He is adequately meticulous when he separates the system of three principles; for example, he tries to restrict the scope of the Q-principle to prevent overlap between the Q-principle and I-principle. It may be his over-confidence in his own study on the various theories of communication, Levinson revises Grice’s Co-operative principle, esp. the principle of manner in a new way but he pays too little attention to the principle of Quality; he at least faces squarely the complication of conversation in real life; if his theory is not convincing enough, he has to make a lot of efforts to attempt to account for it in a reasonable way.
In conclusion, we should admit that Grice’s theory of Conversational Inplicature contributes a lot to the development of pragmatics as a fresh, creative and independent branch of linguistics; it is esp. remarkable that the theory shows how, in the event of an apparent violation of the co-operative principle and maxims, hearers are expected to make any assumptions needed to dispose of the violation. The theory of conversational imlicature is “redundant”, even “self-conflicting and overlapping”, and to some extent it is too idealized and far from perfect, but the most serious problems in Grice’s theory are those he discovers himself. Grice’s innovative endeavor to create a general philosophical theory of language is meaningful. The significance and the utility are far more important than the issues from many commentators.

http://www.xiezuo8.com/article/9/62/20150.html
第2个回答  推荐于2016-11-06
The Grice thinks that in the language social intercourse the process, social intercourse both parties have to cooperate, following four standards of[with]"cooperation principle", in the most direct way, the tallest efficiency carry on social intercourse.But in actual social intercourse middlemans usually have intention to breach a certain standard among them with acquire special conversation meaning.Cooperating the principle can not explain people why want to talk in a round-about way.For this, the British linguist Leech put forward "manner principle", using this as the complement which cooperate a principle.
The Leech points out that people for touching "face" of the other party not and simple and directly, cans be beat around the bush and reserveds to express its true information indirectly, but lets hearer oneself comprehend his "the idea out of the speech".The manner principle is under the circumstance of[with] other condition homologies, dying down the ill-mannered conviction to the lowest limit.Obey some rightness person or third party to say ill-mannered words, or slightly go don't say or the circumlocution speak indirectly[6].The manner principle requests people in the social intercourse as far as possible the decrease have others of, own beneficial standpoint;Reduce to belittle others as far as possible, to own applause;Reduce as far as possible to the inconformity of the others standpoint and the opposition of the affection.Altogether, the manner principle is under the circumstance of[with] other condition homologies, dying down the ill-mannered conviction to the lowest limit, some is ill-mannered words to obedient personses or third party, or go not to say slightly, or tactfully, speak indirectly.本回答被提问者采纳
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