| dc.description.abstract |
Apology, a face-supporting act that maintains harmony between interactants in
discourses, also occurs in drama texts, including those of Wole Soyinka and Ola
Rotimi. Extant linguistic studies on apology largely focused on the functions and
strategies for realising apologies in different languages and cultures, with scant
attention paid to the use of apologies in drama texts. This study was, therefore,
designed to investigate the deployment of apology in selected plays of Wole Soyinka
and Ola Rotimi, with a view to determining their types, contexts and pragmatic acts.
John Gumperz’s Theory of Interactional Sociolinguistics, complemented by M. A. K.
Halliday’s Systemic Functional Grammar and Jacob Mey’s Pragmatic Acts Theory,
was adopted as the framework. The descriptive design was used. Wole Soyinka and
Ola Rotimi were purposively selected because of their literary versatility and
prominent deployment of apology in their plays. Four texts (two from each playwright)
were purposively selected because of their thematic relevance. The ones from Wole
Soyinka were Alapata Apata (AA) and Kongi’s Harvest (KH), while those from Ola
Rotimi were The Gods Are Not to Blame (TG) and Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again
(OH). The data were subjected to pragmatic analysis.
Four types of apology were identified: review apology, constraint apology, offence-
reducing apology and routine apology. These apology types captured the rationale for
apology performance in the texts. Review and constraint apology types are motivated
by self-realisation of mistakes committed and prevention of imminent problems.
Offence-reducing apology downplays the seriousness of an offence committed, while
routine apology reveals the role of power in apology performance. Four context types
were found: cultural, political, elitist and cognitive. Cultural context captures apologies
that are employed when cultural issues are discussed, and it is found in all the apology
types (OH, TG and AA and KH). Political context embraces the discourse of politics-
related issues and features in routine and offence-reducing apology types (OH). Elitist
context captures apology performance influenced by educational and intellectual
superiority, and it manifests in offence-reducing apology (OH). Cognitive context
projects apologies influenced by mental realisation of offence committed; this
manifests in review apology (TG, AA and OH). Four categories of practs characterise
the apologies, namely wrong-admitting, relationship-mending, favour-seeking and
wrong-ascribing. The practs indicate the implications of the apologies for enhancing
individual self-assessment and ensuring social cohesion. Wrong-admitting practs
indicate admittance of offence; they manifest the allopracts of pleading, regretting,
soothing, disdaining and repairing (AA, TG, KH and OH). The relationship-mending
practs capture relationship-restoring capacity of apologies; they display the allopracts
of pleading, regretting, soothing, disdaining and repairing (AA, OH, TG and KH).
Favour-seeking practs have pleading allopracts (AA and TG). Wrong-ascribing practs
demonstrate opposing and ignoring allopracts (OH).
The apology types in the selected plays of Wole Soyinka and Ola Rotimi and practs in
different contexts reflect the harmony-restoration orientation of apologies. |
en_US |