Martin (1992: 489):
In short, method of development is where a text is coming from; point is where it's going to. Theme is how a speaker looks at things; New is where she takes the listener to. Hyper-Theme is what a speaker is going to say; hyper-New is what a listener's learned. Macro-Theme is their way in; macro-New is where they've been. A text is a trip: method of development is the route taken, while point is why you went there in the first place — what you've seen/learned/experienced/taken away. Method of development is the plan; point is the holiday.
Blogger Comments:
[1] These characterisations of method of development and point are concerned with the experiential meaning that is textually highlighted, rather than the textual highlighting itself. This can be demonstrated by glossing the two terms as follows:
- introductory paragraph, topic sentences and Themes is where the text is coming from;
- News, paragraph summaries and text summary is where it's going to.
[2] Again, these characterisations of Theme and New are concerned with the experiential meaning that is textually highlighted, rather than the textual highlighting itself. Theme is the giving of textual prominence to what is the point of departure of the clause as message. Theme can highlight textual and interpersonal elements as well as the experiential. New is the giving of textual prominence to what the speaker regards as unrecoverable to the listener. New can highlight textual and interpersonal elements as well as the experiential.
[3] Here the concern is writing pedagogy, not linguistic theory, and the focus is on experiential meaning, rather than textual highlighting. This can be demonstrated by glossing the two terms as follows:
- topic sentence is what a speaker is going to say
- paragraph summary is what a listener's learned
[4] A paragraph summary is meaning created by the speaker (writer). In contradistinction, what a listener has learned from a text is meaning created by the listener.
[5] Here the concern is again writing pedagogy, not linguistic theory, and the focus is on experiential meaning, rather than textual highlighting. This can be demonstrated by glossing the two terms as follows:
- introductory paragraph is their way in
- text summary is where they've been.
[6] In terms of the metaphor 'a text is a trip', 'the route taken' also includes the meanings not included in the introductory paragraph, topic sentences and Themes. The entire text is 'the route taken'.
[7] The claim of this metaphor is that News, paragraph summaries and text summary is 'why you went there in the first place'. This misconstrues the meaning of point in terms of cause: purpose, and ascribes it to the interlocutors, rather than the text.
[8] This can be glossed as follows:
- introductory paragraph, topic sentences and Themes are the plan (of the trip);
- News, paragraph summaries and text summary are the holiday (of the trip).
In terms of the metaphor 'a text is a trip', all the meanings of the entire text constitute the trip (holiday).
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