kiana
(Kiana)
#1
style and pseudonymity in pauline scholarship 129
environments, and (2) a parallel social dimension for linguistic change
along this horizontal axis to account for changes in the diachronic social
lexicon. We locate individual “time Slices” (characterized by significant
social activities, e.g., imprisonments, missionary journeys) in the author’s
life that provide the social context for the production of a writing or group
of writings on the relevant location within the timeline. We also locate
the addressees and their situational features here. inscribed addressees
are convenient markers for performing addressee interpersonal analy-
sis for a particular letter. this accounts for Bell’s contextual axis, along
which we group several “register profiles,” according to diachronic loca-
tion on the landscape (e.g., the thessalonian letters were written around
the same time from the same place, so they would form a register profile),
but which also tend to yield a parallel social profile. thus, any number
of writings created in a single time slice may populate a register profile
vertically (although, for simplicity, the above register profiles only repre-
sent one writing each). Biber’s situational components formalize points
of social variation within each register profile in order to facilitate assess-
ment of individual writings. register profiles or socially related groups of
writings may be contrasted with one another for the purposes of analysis.
this enables the comparison of register variation within a single author
over an extended period of time within a variety of social contexts, allow-
ing us to study the correlation—if any—between Bell’s two dimensions
of style-shift, the contextual (social) and the co-textual (stylistic). once
we have located levels of register variation (temporal and contextual), we
can then look at the co-textual differences between register profiles to see
whether language variation tracks with social variations, as sociolinguistic
studies in style-shift predict.
this comparative register profile landscape features the tenor of dis-
course, along with its interpersonal realizations, as the most developed
metafunction due to Bell’s insight that this remains the most significant
component of register for assessing style-shift. conveniently, Biber’s regis-
ter model develops the situational components for tenor most thoroughly.
in addition to an addressor’s location on the timeline (Biber’s chronology
feature) and social setting within the time slice, issues of geography may
also be relevant due to linguistic influences upon the addressor’s language
due to living and working in a specific region, among a specific people,
with distinct linguistic tendencies. Paul’s tendency to sometimes occupy
several geographical locations within a single time slice calls for further
precision here. i have divided Biber’s geography, as it relates to the addres-
sor, into go, where we will want to consider the various regions in which