Martin (1992: 564, 565, 566, 568):
These "stories" are alike in that they are built up around a set of narrative clauses (an activity sequence in terms of the field theory developed here); …
For Plum, as in Martin and Rothery's work, the recount is a relatively iconic rendering of an activity sequence (the Record stage); … Expectancies about how an activity sequence will unfold are countered, with ensuing events departing from the norm in some significant way. …
Texts 7.1-4 have been constructed below to illustrate these genres as interpersonal manipulations of the same activity sequence …
The ways in which interpersonal meaning inflects activity sequences to construct these four story genres is summarised in Table 7.20.
Table 7.20 Interpersonal meaning across story genres
interpersonal:modalisation modulation attitude recount usuality prosodic affect anecdote unusuality; varied affect exemplum unusuality; obligation negative affect narrative unusuality; inclination negative to positive affect
Blogger Comment:
This continues the misconstrual of semantics (activity sequence) as context (field). As can be seen from these excerpts, an activity sequence here refers to events in a narrative. They are the linguistic construals of experience of an author.
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