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Title: PROSE%20STYLES:%20TOUGH,%20SWEET%20AND%20STUFFY


1
PROSE STYLESTOUGH, SWEET AND STUFFY
  • by Don L. F. Nilsen

2
POINT OF VIEW THE NOVEL THE AD THE TEXT
BOOK ETHOS PATHOS LOGOS TOUGH
SWEET STUFFY 1ST PERSON 2ND PERSON 3RD
PERSON SUBJECTIVE SUBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE INFORMAL
INTIMATE FORMAL
3
TOUGH LANGUAGE
  • Tough language is the rhetoric of Frederic Henry
    in Ernest Hemingways Farewell to Arms
  • In the late summer of that year we lived in a
    house in a village that looked across the river
    and the pain to the mountains. In the bed of the
    river there were pebbles and boulders, dry and
    white in the sun, and the water was clear and
    swiftly moving and blue in the channels.

4
  • It is the language of intimacy, the language of
    no pretentions. The words are simple and the
    grammar is simple.
  • The writing is not planned, but just happens, in
    a stream of consciousness kind of wayyou are
    there.
  • The sentences are short and choppy. If there is
    conjunction it is coordination, not
    subordination.
  • It is the language of the loosened tie and the
    rolled up shirt sleeves, with no pretentious
    multi-syllable or low-frequency words.

5
  • Being egocentric, it is subjective, and whether
    it is written from the author participant or the
    author omniscient point of view, it is concerned
    with communicating peoples innermost feelings.
  • Tough language is the language of fiction, and
    therefore the process of in medias res is
    totally appropriate to this styleIn the late
    summer of that year we lived in a house in a
    village that looked across the river and the
    plain to the mountain.

6
SWEET LANGUAGE
  • Sweet language is the language of advertisers.
    Walker Gibson calls this language AROMA
    (Advertising Rhetoric of Madison Avenue).
  • Sweet language is listener-oriented in an attempt
    to seduce listeners into buying products they
    dont want or need.

7
  • It is language full of innovative spellings,
    creative grammar, and wild punctuation.
  • Sweet writing contains many sentence fragments,
    and would rather flaunt a grammatical rule than
    conform to it Winston tastes good like a
    cigarette should. What do you want, good
    grammar, or good taste?

8
  • Sweet language is the language of sensationalism,
    the language of superlatives and hyperbole.
  • It is the language of diversion it plays tricks
    on the reader with its puns, its word coinages,
    its humor, its packaging, its sex, and other
    aspects which have nothing to do with the product
    itself.
  • It is informal, or sometimes even intimate or
    cutesy in tone.

9
  • Contractions, clippings, blendings, and deletions
    abound, making it all the more cryptic and
    intimate.
  • Its full of slang expressions like no doubt
    about it, cut it out, and where else? It
    can be cutesy, as in Dry skin? Not me, darling.
    Every inch of little me is as smooth as (well,
    you know what).

10
  • Gibson says that a common kind of coinage in
    sweet language is the noun-adjunct construction
    (a noun modified by another noun).
  • We see this kind of coinage in Speakerphone,
    Fooderama living, decorator colors, and
    Supermarket selection.
  • The Bell Company praises the beauties of its
    hands-free, group-talk, across-the-room
    telephone.

11
STUFFY LANGUAGE
  • Where tough language is I-oriented, and sweet
    language is you-oriented, stuffy language is
    it-oriented.
  • It is the language of laboratory experiments , of
    research papers and theses and dissertations and
    scholarly books, and academia in general.

12
  • Stuffy language is highly grammatical and highly
    formal.
  • The syntax contains a great deal of
    subordination, and the sentences are frequently
    long and complex.
  • Infinitives, gerunds, present and past
    participial constructions, nominative absolutes,
    perfect, progressive, and passive constructions
    are almost totally confined to this style of
    writing.

13
  • It is an impersonal style to the extent that
    first-person pronouns are seldom allowed. For
    this and other reasons, passive constructions and
    impersonal constructions with abstract subjects
    are common.
  • Stuffy language is also the language of
    limitations, restrictions and qualifications
    because the writer doesnt want to make claims
    beyond the evidence.
  • Limiting (as opposed to descriptive) adjectives
    are frequent, as are prepositional phrases and
    relative clauses.

14
THE BIRMINGHAM RIOTSREPORTED IN THREE DIFFERENT
STYLES
  • The police and firemen drove hundreds of rioting
    Negroes off the streets today with high pressure
    hoses and an armored car.
  • (New York Times May 8, 1963)

15
  • Three times during the day, waves of shouting,
    rock-throwing Negroes had poured into the
    downtown business district, to be scattered and
    driven back by battering streams of water from
    high-pressure hoses and swinging clubs of
    policement and highway patrolmen.
  • (New York Herald Tribune)

16
  • The blaze of bombs, the flash of blades, the
    eerie glow of fire, the keening cries of hatred,
    the wild dance of terror at nightall this was
    Birmingham, Alabama.
  • (Time, May 7, 1963)

17
SUMMARY OF WORD DEVELOPMENT THE NOVEL THE
AD THE TEXT BOOK COLLOQUIAL COLLOQUIAL FORMA
L SLANG CHARACTER SLANG AD NO
SLANG DEPENDENT
DEPENDENT MODALS GERUNDS INFIN
ITIVES PERFECTS PROGRESSIVES SPELLING
SPELLINGS SPELLINGS CHARACTERS CREATIVE
CORRECT ANGLO-SAXON ANGLO-SAXON INKHORN
TERMS WORDS WORDS GREEK LATIN
18
SUMMARY OF SENTENCE DEVELOPMENT THE NOVEL THE
AD THE TEXT BOOK SHORT, CHOPPY LONG,
COMPLICATED FRAGMENTS PERFECT
GRAMMAR COMMA SPLICES SIMPLE SIMPLE LONG
COMPLEX RESTRICTIVE MODIFIER SIMPLE
SENTENCES COMPOUND COMPLEX
SENTENCES CASUAL PUNCTUATION PERFECT
PUNCTUATION RHETORICAL SENTENCES
DONT QUESTIONS MAKE CLAIMS
BEYOND IMPERATIVES EVIDENCE THEY,YOU,
19
!SUMMARY OF PARAGRAPH AND DISCOURSE
DEVELOPMENT! THE NOVEL THE AD THE TEXT
BOOK STREAM OF CASUAL STRUCTURED CONSCIOUSNES
S INDUCTIVE WHATEVER DEDUCTIVE NOTE THE
NEWSPAPER IS SUPER DEDUCTIVE BECAUSE PEOPLE READ
HEADLINES AND MAYBE FIRST PARAGRAPH (WHO, WHAT,
WHEN, WHY, WHERE, HOW) AND LATER MATERIALS GET
BURIED OR CUT MUCH INUENDO INTIMATE
CUTESY CAUSAL AND IMPLICATION
20
!!SUMMARY OF USE OF FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE THE
NOVEL THE AD THE TEXT BOOK AUTHOR
PARTICIPANT ? AUTHOR AUTHOR OBSERVANT OBSERVAN
T AUTHOR OMNISCIENT MAINLY TROPES MAINLY
SCHEMES LITERAL IN MEDIAS RES ALLITERATION
METAPHOR ASSONANCE IRONY RHYME POETIC
JUSTICE CUTESY TONE SIMILES ALLEGORIES
21
!!!SUMMARY OF PUNCTUATION THE NOVEL THE
AD THE TEXT BOOK CREATIVE CREATIVE FORMAL
USE OF PUNCTUATION PUNCTUATION SEMI
COLONS PERIODS PARENTHESES DAS
HES HYPHENS RESTRICTIVE AND
NON-RESTRICTIVE CLAUSES PROPER
CAPITALIZATION USE OF ELIPSES
SIC BRACKETS, ETC.
22
  • References
  • Barry, Anita K. English Grammar Language as
    Human Behavior, 2nd Edition. Upper Saddle River,
    NJ Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2002.
  • Eschholz, Paul, Alfred Rosa, and Virginia Clark.
    Language Awareness, 10th Edition. Bedford/St.
    Martins, 2009.
  • Gibson, Walker. Tough, Sweet and Stuffy An Essay
    on Modern American Prose Styles. Westport, CT
    Greenwood Press, 1966.
  • Nilsen, Alleen, and Alleen Pace Nilsen.
    Encyclopedia of 20th Century American Humor.
    Westport, CT Greenwood, 2000.
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