Affiliation:
1. University of Arkansas
Abstract
Abstract
Adversative passives like Mandarin Chinese bei-passives are known to convey adversity, but what
“adversity” means specifically for speakers of bei- in conversational discourse remains unknown. Whereas previous
studies examine adversity within the bei- clause, this study uses the lens concept to investigate speakers’
subjective evaluations of the event attested by the larger context beyond the bei- clause. Using a subjectivity
coding scheme and the discourse adjacent alternation method, I analyzed 4,203 values of event valence of 1,401
bei- utterances and 65 alternations in spontaneous talk show conversations. Results show that: (1) The same event that a speaker evaluates as “adverse” using bei- is sometimes evaluated as “non-adverse” using non-bei structures. (2) The same bei+verb phrase that previous studies may deem “adverse” can be evaluated as “adverse” or “positive” by actual speakers. (3) 84.5% (1,184/1,401) of the time, bei-passive in
conversation expresses speakers’ evaluation that a causative event is adverse for the affectee, regardless of what reality is. (4)
Adversity means undesirable, disadvantageous, morally or socially wrong, empathy-deserving, and/or sympathy-deserving for speakers
of bei-. The findings indicate that the adversity that bei- conveys is not an objective
description of reality but a subjective evaluation independent of reality–the Adversity lens. This study sheds light on
subjectivity and specific manifestations of adversity in conversational discourse.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Visual Arts and Performing Arts