Communicative dynamism

In linguistics, Communicative Dynamism (CD) is one of the key notions of the theory of Functional Sentence Perspective (FSP), developed mainly by Jan Firbas and his followers in the Prague School of Linguistics.

CD is canonically described as "a phenomenon constantly displayed by linguistic elements in the act of communication. It is an inherent quality of communication and manifests itself in constant development towards the attainment of a communicative goal; in other words, towards the fulfilment of a communicative purpose."

Extensive research in FSP has established that Communicative Dynamism is a matter of degree:

The notion of Communicative Dynamism was introduced into linguistics by Jan Firbas in 1956 in a study called Poznámky k problematice anglického slovního pořádku s hlediska aktuálního členění větného [Some notes on the problem of English word order from the point of view of functional sentence perspective]. Today, the term is firmly established in major academic grammars, as well as in general reference works on language and linguistics:

  • "Communicative dynamism refers to the variation of communicative value as between different parts of an utterance."
  • "communicative dynamism: variation in the importance or prominence of different parts of an utterance in conveying communication."

See also

Further resources

Notes

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Communicative dynamism, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.