Martin & Rose (2007: 263):
As with larger segments in written texts discussed above, formatting can be a useful starting point, but now it is the paragraphing that can help to indicate the phases in which the field unfolds. As paragraphing tends to coincide with the hierarchy of periodicity, we can adjust and expand the information that paragraphing gives us by looking at what is presented as hyperThemes and hyperNews. For example, what is presented first in each paragraph of the Inauguration Day recount are times that scaffold the activity sequence of the day’s events and of Mandela’s speech:
The day’s activity sequence is concluded in the hyperNew of the second last paragraph, with Finally..., and is then reoriented in the last paragraph, beginning with The day…
The global scaffolding resource here is sequence in time, expressed as external conjunctions and temporal circumstances.
Blogger Comments:
[1] To be clear, in SFL Theory, 'field' refers to the ideational dimension of the culture modelled as a semiotic system. Here Martin & Rose unwittingly use it to refer to the ideational semantics of a text as it unfolds in logogenesis.
[2] To be clear, as previously explained, Martin's hyperTheme and hyperNew are his rebrandings of topic sentence (of a paragraph) and paragraph summary from the field of writing pedagogy. Writing pedagogy is concerned with proposals on how to write, whereas linguistic theory is concerned with propositions that model language.
[3] To be clear, what is actually presented first in each paragraph of the Inauguration Day recount are:
10 May
The ceremonies
On that lovely autumn day
Today
We who were outlaws not so long ago
We
Never, never, and never again
Let freedom
A few moments later
The day
That is, Martin & Rose have cherry-picked the six instances that support their analysis, and ignored the four instances that do not.
[4] See, for example, Activity Sequences: A Cornucopia Of Theoretical Inconsistencies.
[5] To be clear, this is inconsistent with both the source meaning of hyperNew as paragraph summary, and with the authors' notion of hyperNew distilling what had preceded it (p195-6), since this clause realises meaning that had not previously been mentioned:
Finally a chevron of impala jets left a smoke trail of the black, red, green, blue and gold of the new South African flag.
[6] Trivially, none of the six temporal Themes are conjunctions, and two — the first and last — are participants, not circumstances.
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