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The pragmatics of verbal irony: echo or pretence?
Deirdre Wilson
Published in Lingua 116 (2006) 1722-1743
Abstract
This paper considers two post-Gricean attempts to proide an e!planator" account o#
erbal iron"$ The #irst treats iron" as an echoic use o# lan%ua%e in which the spea&er
tacitl" dissociates hersel# #rom an attributed utterance or thou%ht$ The second treats
iron" as a t"pe o# pretence in which the spea&er 'ma&es as i# to per#orm a certain
speech act e!pectin% her audience to see throu%h the pretence and reco%nise the
moc&in% or critical attitude behind it$ The two approaches hae sometimes been seen as
empiricall" or theoreticall" indistin%uishable and seeral h"brid accounts incorporatin%
elements o# both hae been proposed$ * will ar%ue that the echoic and pretence accountsare distin%uishable on both theoretical and empirical %rounds and that while echoic use
is essential to standard cases o# erbal iron" pretence is not$ +oweer the term irony
has been applied to a er" wide ran%e o# phenomena not all o# which can be e!plained
in the same wa" and * will end b" brie#l" mentionin% some less central cases where
arieties o# pretence or simulation do indeed achiee ironical e##ects$
Keywords:
*ron", choic use, .eleance theor", Pretence, /etarepresentation
1. Introduction
+ere are some t"pical e!amples o# erbal iron"
(1) Mary (after a difficult meeting): That went well$
(2) s * reached the ban& at closin% time the ban& cler& help#ull" shut the door in m"
#ace$
(3) Tim +enman is not the most charismatic tennis pla"er in the world$
The point o# these utterances is not to claim what the" would be ta&en to claim i# uttered
literall" (that the meetin% went well the ban& cler& behaed help#ull" and there are
more charismatic tennis pla"ers than Tim +enman) but to draw attention to some
discrepanc" between a description o# the world that the spea&er is apparentl" puttin%
#orward and the wa" (she wants to su%%est) thin%s actuall" were$ hearer who does not
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reco%nise this will hae misunderstood and a spea&er who doubts the hearers abilit" to
reco%nise it on the basis o# bac&%round &nowled%e alone ma" proide additional clues
(#or instance an ironical tone o# oice a wr" #acial e!pression an incon%ruit" or
e!a%%eration as in (2) or a superlatie as in (3))$ 1 The abilit" to understand simple
#orms o# iron" is normall" present #rom around the a%e o# 6 and is &nown to be
impaired in autism and certain #orms o# ri%ht hemisphere dama%e$ 2 The %oal o#
pra%matics is to describe this abilit" and thus e!plain how iron" is understood$
ccordin% to classical rhetoric erbal iron" is a trope and tropes are utterances with
#i%uratie meanin%s which relate to their literal meanin%s in one o# seeral standard
wa"s$ *n metaphor the #i%uratie meanin% is a simile or comparison based on the literal
meanin%, in iron" proper as in (1) and (2) it is the opposite o# the literal meanin%, and
in ironical understatement as in (3) it is a stren%thenin% o# the literal meanin%$ These
de#initions are part o# estern #ol& lin%uistics and can be #ound in an" dictionar"$ To
turn them into an e!planator" theor" we would need #irst a de#inition o# #i%uratie
meanin% second a method o# deriin% #i%uratie meanin%s #rom their literal
counterparts and third some rationale #or the practice o# substitutin% a #i%uratie #or a
literal meanin%$ *# #i%uratie meanin%s are assi%ned b" the %rammar we need an e!plicit
mechanism #or deriin% them, i# the" are pra%maticall" in#erred we need an account o#
how the in#erence is tri%%ered what #orm it ta&es and what t"pes o# outputs it "ields$
*n a #ew cases what starts out as a creatie use o# iron" ma" become #ull" le!icalised
or %rammaticalised$3 +oweer the interpretation o# tropes in %eneral is so hi%hl"
conte!t-dependent that it is most unli&el" to be dealt with entirel" in the %rammar$
Grices brie# discussion o# tropes (Grice 16751 34) was the #irst serious attempt to
anal"se them usin% pra%matic machiner" independentl" needed #or the anal"sis o#
ordinar" literal utterances$ s is well &nown he treats iron" metaphor h"perbole andmeiosis as blatant iolations o# the #irst ma!im o# ualit" ('8o not sa" what "ou
beliee to be #alse) desi%ned to tri%%er a related true implicature in the case o#
metaphor this would be a simile or comparison based on the literal meanin% in the case
o# iron" it would be the contradictor" or contrar" o# the literal meanin% and in the case
o# understatement it would be somethin% stron%er than the literal meanin%$ 9n this
approach the implicatures o# (1)-(3) aboe would include (4a)-(4c)
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(4) a$ That meetin% didnt %o well$
b$ s * reached the ban& at closin% time the ban& cler& unhelp#ull" shut the
door in m" #ace$
c$ Tim +enman is #ar #rom bein% the most charismatic tennis pla"er in the
world$
The proposal to replace encoded #i%uratie meanin%s b" pra%maticall" deried
implicatures is a step in the direction o# a %enuinel" e!planator" account o# tropes$ *t is
onl" a #irst step thou%h in other respects Grices account o# tropes is simpl" a modern-
dress ariant o# the classical account and shares man" o# the same wea&nesses$ *n
particular it does not e!plain wh" a rational spea&er should decide to utter a blatant
#alsehood in order to cone" a related true implicature which could :ust as well hae
been literall" e!pressed$ *n later wor& Grice ac&nowled%es that his account o# iron" is
insu##icientl" e!planator" (althou%h he does not seem to hae had similar worries about
his parallel accounts o# other tropes) and mentions some additional #eatures o# iron"
which ma" be seen as intended to supplement his account or point in the direction o# an
alternatie account, * will touch on these brie#l" in discussin% Grices approach to iron"
in section 2$
+oweer m" main concern in this paper is with two post-Gricean attempts to
proide a rationale #or iron" in which the blatant iolation o# a pra%matic ma!im or
principle o# literal truth#ulness pla" no e!planator" role (althou%h as noted aboe the
#act that an utterance would be blatantl" #alse or inappropriate i# literall" understood
ma" be a use#ul clue to the presence o# iron")$ 9ne approach #irst proposed b" ;perber
and ilson (11) treats erbal iron" as a t"pe o# echoic allusion to an attributed
utterance or thou%ht$ 9n this approach the spea&er o# (1) is not hersel# assertin% that themeetin% went well but e!pressin% her own reaction to a thou%ht or utterance with a
similar content which she tacitl" attributes to someone else (or to hersel# at another
time) and which she wants to su%%est is ludicrousl" #alse inade
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moc&in% attitude to it$ /ore %enerall" the main point in t"pical cases o# erbal iron"
such as (1)-(3) is to e!press the spea&ers dissociatie attitude to a tacitl" attributed
utterance or thou%ht (or more %enerall" a representation with a conceptual content #or
instance a moral or cultural norm) based on some perceied discrepanc" between the
wa" it represents the world and the wa" thin%s actuall" are (;perber and ilson 11
16 10 1, ilson and ;perber 12)$
The second approach which is su%%ested b" the et"molo%" o# the word irony and
has a much lon%er histor" treats erbal iron" as a t"pe o# pretence$ 9n this approach
the spea&er o# (1) is not assertin% but merel" pretendin% to assert that the meetin% went
well while e!pectin% her audience to see throu%h the pretence and reco%nise the critical
or moc&in% attitude behind it (see #or instance >lar& and Gerri% 14, >urrie in press,
.ecanati 2004, alton 10)$ ;imilarl" the spea&er o# (2) is merel" pretendin% to
hae #ound the ban& cler&s behaiour help#ul and the spea&er o# (3) is merel"
pretendin% to %ie serious thou%ht to the possibilit" that Tim +enman mi%ht not be the
most charismatic tennis pla"er in the world$
?oth echoic and pretence accounts re:ect the basic claim o# the classical and standard
Gricean accounts that the hallmar& o# iron" is to communicate the opposite o# the
literal meanin%$ ?oth o##er a rationale #or iron" and both treat ironical utterances such
as (1)-(3) as intended to draw attention to some discrepanc" between a description o#
the world that the spea&er is apparentl" puttin% #orward and the wa" thin%s actuall" are$
These similarities hae proo&ed con#lictin% reactions$ 9n the one hand the two
approaches are sometimes seen as empiricall" or theoreticall" indistin%uishable, seeral
h"brid ersions incorporatin% elements o# both echoic and pretence accounts hae been
produced and the boundaries between them hae become increasin%l" blurred$ 9n the
other hand some de#enders o# both echoic and pretence accounts see their ownapproach as proin% the &e" to iron" and the other approach as o##erin% at best an
incidental sideli%ht$4 * want to consider whether this is a lar%el" terminolo%ical debate o#
interest mainl" to sociolo%ists o# academic li#e or whether there is some %enuine
substance behind it$
*n rhetorical and literar" studies oer the "ears the term irony has been applied to a
wide ariet" o# loosel" related phenomena ran%in% #rom ;ocratic iron" situational
iron" dramatic iron" .omantic iron" cosmic iron" and iron" o# #ate to erbal iron"
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and arious #orms o# parod" wit and humour$@ Aot all o# these phenomena #all s
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the basic idea that an implicature is an elaboration o# the spea&ers meanin% re
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interro%atie in (7b) or the declaratie in (7c) could all be ironicall" intended and
understood althou%h none o# them is blatantl" #alse
(7) a$ 8ont #or%et to use "our indicator$
b$ 8o "ou thin& we should stop #or petrolC
c$ * reall" appreciate cautious driers$
Aotice too that (7a)-(7c) cannot be anal"sed as implicatin% the opposite o# what the"
sa"$ hile the implicatures o# (@a) and (6a) aboe mi%ht well include (@b) and (6b) no
correspondin% implicatures are cone"ed b" (7a)-(7c)$ /ore %enerall" the de#inition o#
iron" as the trope in which the spea&er communicates the opposite o# the literal meanin%
does not do :ustice to the er" rich and aried e##ects o# iron"$ The standard Gricean
approach to iron" thus #ails to e!plain not onl" what tri%%ers the pra%matic in#erence
process but what its output is$
;ome o# these problems could be aoided while preserin% the spirit o# Grices
account b" claimin% that what is oertl" iolated in tropes is not the #irst ma!im o#
ualit" but the #irst ma!im o# uantit" ('/a&e "our contribution as in#ormatie as is
re
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that would neer in #act occur$ /oreoer since it applies e
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e!pressin% a proposition that is patentl" #alse under-in#ormatie or irreleantC These
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utterance H a result predicted b" the echoic account o# iron" but not b" the classical or
Gricean accounts$
nother wa" o# connectin% the presence o# a moc&in% or critical attitude to the
e!pression o# a blatantl" #alse proposition inoles the idea that iron" is a t"pe o#
pretence$ Grice (16751 @4) su%%ests that this mi%ht e!plain wh" a metaphorical
utterance can be pre#aced b" the phrase To speak metaphorically but an ironical
utterance cannot be pre#aced b" the phrase To speak ironically
To be ironical is amon% other thin%s to pretend (as the et"molo%" su%%ests) and
while one wants the pretence to be reco%nised as such to announce it as a
pretence would spoil the e##ect$ (ibid @4)
.epl"in% to or%ensen /iller and ;perber (14) >lar& and Gerri% (14) deelop a
pretence account o# iron" as an alternatie to the echoic account$ >onsider () below
() Trust the eather ?ureauI ;ee what loel" weather it is rain rain rain
or%ensen /iller and ;perber (14 114) treat this as an echoic allusion to a #orecast
#rom the eather ?ureau that the spea&er wants to re:ect as ludicrousl" #alse$ >lar& and
Gerri% treat it as a t"pe o# pretence
ith %ee what lo&ely weather it is the spea&er is pretendin% to be an unseein%
person perhaps a weather #orecaster e!claimin% to an un&nowin% audience how
beauti#ul the weather is$ ;he intends the addressee to see throu%h the pretense H in
such rain she obiousl" could not be ma&in% the e!clamation on her own behal# Hand to see that she is thereb" ridiculin% the sort o# person who would ma&e such
an e!clamation (e$%$ the weather #orecaster) the sort o# person who would accept
it and the e!clamation itsel#$ (>lar& and Gerri% 14 122)
9n this approach the interpretation o# iron" depends on the hearers abilit" to reco%nise
that the spea&er is pretendin% to be a certain sort o# person seriousl" producin% an
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utterance and simultaneousl" e!pressin% her own attitude to it and to the sort o# person
who would produce or beliee it$
.epl"in% in turn to >lar& and Gerri% ;perber (14) de#ended the echoic account
a%ainst their criticisms and went on to raise some ob:ections to >lar& and Gerri%s
ersion o# the pretence account$ 9ther ersions o# the pretence account hae been
deeloped in the recent philosophical and ps"cholo%ical literature (see #or instance
>urrie in press, >olston and Gibbs in press, JreuF and Gluc&sber% 1, Jumon-
Aa&amura Gluc&sber% and ?rown 1@)$ ;eeral o# these respond to ;perbers
ob:ections b" combinin% elements o# the pretence and echoic accounts and * will loo&
at them more closel" in section 4$ /" main claim will be that unless the notion o#
pretence is stretched incredibl" thin pretence accounts o# iron" with or without an
additional echoic element are both descriptiel" and theoreticall" inade
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() a$ ;ome propositions are tautolo%ies$ b$ Bor instance a tall man is a man$
(10) a$ /ost le!ical concepts are atomic$ b$ TKP+9A K>T.9A >??G$
*n other cases the metarepresented thou%ht or utterance is chosen not purel" #or its
lo%ical properties but #or the #act that it has been or mi%ht be produced or entertained
b" a particular person or t"pe o# person (or b" people in %eneral) and a hearer who #ails
to reco%nise this will hae misunderstood$ Bree indirect speech and thou%ht as in (11b)
and (12b) are obious illustrations o# this tacitl" attri$uti&e use o# lan%ua%e
(11) a$ The 8ean spo&e up$ b$ The uniersit" was in crisis$
(12) a$ The students were thou%ht#ul$ b$ *# the" didnt act now it mi%ht be too late$
plausible interpretation o# (11)12 is that the claim that the uniersit" was in crisis (or
some claim similar enou%h in content #or (11b) to be re%arded as an appropriate
paraphrase or summar") is bein% tacitl" attributed to the 8ean$ ;imilarl" a plausible
interpretation o# (12) is that the thou%ht that i# the students didnt act strai%ht awa" it
mi%ht be too late (or some thou%ht similar enou%h in content #or (12b) to be re%arded as
an appropriate paraphrase or summar") is bein% tacitl" attributed to the students$ +ere
(11b) and (12b) are not descriptiel" used the spea&er is not assertin% them and does
not ta&e responsibilit" #or their truth but is metarepresentin% a thou%ht or utterance with
a similar content that she attributes to some identi#iable person or %roup o# people$
ccordin% to the echoic account erbal iron" is a tacitl" attributie use o# lan%ua%e$
choic use is in the second place a particular sub-t"pe o# attributie use$ The main
point o# an echoic use o# lan%ua%e is not simpl" to report the content o# the attributed
thou%ht or utterance but to show that the spea&er is thin&in% about it and wants toin#orm the hearer o# her own reaction to it (;perber and ilson 16 chapter 4 section
)$ >onsider ac&s utterance in (13) and the possible echoic responses in (14a-c)
(13) ack: * had dinner with >homs&" last ni%ht$
(14) a$ %ue: Lou had dinner with >homs&"I hat did he sa"C
b$ %ue: Lou had dinner with >homs&"C *s he in n%landC
c$ %ue: Lou had dinner with >homs&"$ 8ont ma&e me lau%h$
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*n each case the point o# ;ues response is not to remind ac& o# what he has onl" :ust
said but to show that she is thin&in% about it and to cone" her attitude to it surprise
and pleasure in (14a) puFFlement perhaps tin%ed with scepticism in (14b) and outri%ht
moc&er" and disbelie# in (14c) where ;ue echoes ac&s claim in such a wa" as to
indicate that she does not beliee it and #inds it absurd$ The ran%e o# attitudes that a
spea&er can e!press to an echoed thou%ht or utterance ran%e #rom acceptance or
endorsement o# its descriptie content as in (14a) throu%h
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(1) aboe is interpretiel" used the
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distinction between the e!amples in (1) (@a) and (6a) but merel" a di##erence in the
e!tent to which the hopes or e!pectations bein% echoed are uniersall" shared$
The utterances in (7a) ( -on!t forget to use your indicator ) and (7b) ( -o you think we
should stop for petrol) li&e Grices e!ample Look, that car has all its windows intact
do not echo widel" shared hopes or e!pectations and re
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must all be treated in the same wa"$ The implication #or pretence accounts o# iron" is
that either all these #orms must be anal"sable as cases o# pretence or none are$
To illustrate the %radualness o# the borderline between reportin% and echoin% and
between the arious t"pes o# attitude e!pressed in echoic use consider the e!chan%e in
(1@) where ?umpers the narrator o# a noel b" Peter de Mries is de#endin% his Ph8 on
/auses of -i&orce in %outheastern 0ural #owa a%ainst the criticisms o# the chie#
e!aminer Tim&en
(1@) 1umpers: hat *m tr"in% to sa" %entlemen is that diorce is as complicated as
marria%e and that is a relationship inconceiabl" intricate$
Timken: hich a bachelor li&e m"sel# can be onl" hopelessl" une
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(16) a$ +e sa"s he almost won$
b$ +e almost won he thin&s$
c$ Poor #ool$ +e thin&s he almost won$
d$ +e almost won$ lle%edl"$
e$ +e almost won$ Aot$
#$ +e almost won$ +uhI
%$ +e almost won$
*n each o# these utterances /ar" can be understood as e!pressin% a dissociatie attitude
to an utterance or thou%ht that she attributes to Peter$ The main di##erences between
them are in how e!plicitl" the attitude is e!pressed and the attribution made$ *n (16a)
(16b) and (16d) the attribution is lin%uisticall" indicated (b" use o# the words he says
he thinks and allegedly) and the attitude tacitl" cone"ed$ *n (16c) (16e) and (16#) b"
contrast the attitude is lin%uisticall" indicated (b" use o# the e!pressions poor fool
huh2 and not ) and the attribution is tacitl" cone"ed$ *n (16c) both attitude and
attribution are lin%uisticall" indicated and in (16%) both attitude and attribution are
tacitl" cone"ed$ 9nl" (16%) is a t"pical case o# erbal iron" this is the onl" e!ample
inolin% the tacit e!pression o# a dissociatie attitude to a tacitl" attributed utterance or
thou%ht$ +oweer as illustrated in (16a) (16b) and (16d) more e!plicit #orms o#
reported speech and thou%ht ma" also tacitl" cone" a dissociatie attitude and thus
achiee ironical e##ects, moreoer as illustrated b" (16c)-(16#) #ull" conceptual #orms
o# encodin% shade o## into inter:ections (which themseles shade o## into arious
paralin%uistic and non-lin%uistic cues) the borderline between oert and tacit
attributions and e!pressions o# attitude and hence between t"pical and less t"pical caseso# iron" is a %radual one$
* hae treated (16%) as t"pical case o# erbal iron"$ +oweer this is true onl" i# it is
uttered with the #lat low-&e" intonation %enerall" &nown as the 'ironical tone o#
oice$1@ /ar" mi%ht hae e!pressed her sceptical reaction to Peters remar& (and thus
achieed ironical e##ects) b" utterin% (16%) in at least two other wa"s$ *n one she would
parod" or imitate Peter usin% a tone o# oice and manner o# articulation similar to his
perhaps combined with a moc&in% or contemptuous #acial e!pression$ *n the other she
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would adopt an e!a%%eratedl" bri%ht coninced tone o# oice and the manner o#
articulation that someone would hae i# %enuinel" coninced b" what Peter said$ ?oth
can le%itimatel" be seen as cases o# pretence in the #irst /ar" is pretendin% to be Peter
(or to spea& in the wa" Peter does) and e!pectin% her audience to see throu%h the
pretence, in the second /ar" is pretendin% to beliee Peter and e!pectin% the audience
to see throu%h the pretence$ This raises the lar& and Gerri% 10, >urrie
2002 2004, .ecanati 2000 2004, alton 10, see also Aichols and ;tich 2000)$ /"
concern here is not with these broader theories which proide aluable insi%hts into the
wa"s in which the perception o# resemblances ma" be e!ploited in communication and
e!pression but about the much more limited issue o# whether iron" is best anal"sed as a
t"pe o# simulation or pretence$ * will ar%ue that it is not$
9ne wa" o# reconcilin% Grices ori%inal account o# iron" with his later remar& that
iron" is a t"pe o# pretence (see section 2 aboe and Grice 16751 34 @3-@4 120)
is to assume that he saw 'ma&in% as i# to sa" as a t"pe o# pretence$ Then 'ma&in% as i#
to sa" that Paul is a #ine #riend would amount to pretendin% to sa" that he is a #ine
#riend and Grices account o# iron" would hae been a pretence account all alon%$.ecanati (2004 71) interprets Grice alon% these lines and appears to endorse a similar
ersion o# the pretence account
;uppose the spea&er sa"s *aul really is a fine friend in a situation in which :ust
the opposite is &nown to be the case$ The spea&er does not reall" sa" or at least
she does not assert what she 'ma&es as i# to sa" (Grices phrase)$ ;omethin% is
lac&in% here namel" the #orce o# a serious assertion$ N hat the spea&er does in
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the ironical case is merel" to pretend to assert the content o# her utterance$ N?"
pretendin% to sa" o# Paul that he is a #ine #riend in a situation in which :ust the
opposite is obiousl" true the spea&er mana%es to communicate that Paul is
eer"thin% but a #ine #riend$ ;he shows b" her utterance how inappropriate it
would be to ascribe to Paul the propert" o# bein% a #ine #riend$
>lar& and Gerri% (14) also trace their ersion o# the pretence account to Grices
ori%inal remar& that iron" is a case o# 'ma&in% as i# to sa" somethin%$
s noted in section 2 (and as seeral o# these authors reco%nise) non-echoic ersions
o# the pretence account do not e!plain wh" a spea&er cannot produce an" blatantl" #alse
or inappropriate utterance and e!pect it to be understood as ironical$ 9ne can pretend to
be an"one at all assertin% or beliein% an"thin% at all$ ;o wh" cant the spea&er in
Grices e!ample Look, that car has all its windows intact be understood as pretendin% to
be the sort o# person who would assert or beliee (in the #ace o# clear counter-eidence)
that the car has all its windows intactC Bor Grice the solution to this problem was
connected with the hostile or dero%ator" attitude that the spea&er is ta&en to e!press$
?ut the most plausible wa" o# lin&in% the e!pression o# a hostile or dero%ator" attitude
with the production o# a mani#estl" #alse under-in#ormatie or irreleant utterance is to
assume that the spea&er is e!pressin% this attitude primaril" to a thou%ht or utterance
with a similar content to the one she has e!pressed and onl" secondaril" to a person$
/oreoer the e!pression o# a hostile dero%ator" or more %enerall" dissociatie
attitude to a possible thou%ht or utterance must hae a point$ s ;perber (14 131)
puts it
bsurdit" o# propositions per se is irreleant$ The absurdit" or een the mereinappropriateness o# human thou%hts on the other hand is o#ten worth remar&in%
on ma&in% #un o# bein% ironic about$ *n other words in order to be success#ull"
ironic the meanin% mentioned must reco%nisabl" echo a thou%ht that has been is
bein% or mi%ht be entertained or e!pressed b" someone$
Thus what is missin% #rom non-echoic ersions o# the pretence account is precisel"
what is emphasised b" the echoic account that the attitude e!pressed in iron" is
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primaril" to a thou%ht or utterance that the spea&er attri$utes to some identi#iable
person or t"pe o# person or to people in %eneral$
ddin% an echoic element to the pretence account helps to e!plain wh" Grices
e!ample Look, that car has all its windows intact reurrie (in press 116) who ar%ues that in iron" 'one pretends to be doin% somethin% which one is not doin% spea&in% seriousl" and
assertiel" seriousl" as&in% a
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stance G (which ma" be identical to B or merel" resemble it) which is the tar%et
o# the ironic comment$ (>urrie in press 11)
>urries account addresses man" o# the ob:ections made b" ;perber (14) to earlier
ersions o# the pretence account$ s he notes it has much in common with the echoic
account (as well as seeral di##erences o# substance or detail which * will hae to leae
to another time)$16 ?oth reco%nise that iron" inoles the attribution o# a thou%ht (or
perspectie or point o# iew) to a speci#ic person or t"pe o# person or to people in
%eneral and the e!pression o# a dissociatie attitude to the attributed thou%ht$ ?oth note
that the thou%ht that is the ob:ect o# the ironical attitude need not be identical to the
proposition e!pressed b" the ironical utterance but ma" merel" resemble it in content$
?oth reco%nise that a %enuine speech act ma" contain a sin%le constituent which is
ironicall" used as in (2) ( s # reached the $ank at closing time, the $ank clerk helpfully
shut the door in my face) a %enuine assertion in which onl" the word helpfully is ironic$
+oweer althou%h allusional pretence accounts deal well with man" o# the ob:ections
to earlier pretence accounts * want to su%%est that the" still encounter a si%ni#icant
problem unless the notion o# pretence is stretched incredibl" thin the standard #orms o#
erbal iron" illustrated in (1)-() aboe are not cases o# pretence$
?oth echoic and pretence accounts are a%reed that the spea&er o# an ironical
utterance does not per#orm the speech act she would standardl" be ta&en to per#orm i#
her utterance were literall" understood$ ?ut it does not #ollow #rom this alone that the"
are cases o# pretence$ >onsider the metaphor in (17a) the h"perbole in (17b) and the
appro!imation in (17c)
(17) a$ That o##ice is a ipers nest$ b$ The article contained millions o# t"pos$
c$ The chairs #ormed a circle$
Aone o# these asserts the proposition literall" e!pressed the spea&er o# (17a) is not
%enuinel" assertin% that the o##ice is a ipers nest and so on #or the other e!amples$
Grice did indeed anal"se metaphor and h"perbole li&e iron" as cases o# 'ma&in% as i#
to sa" (i$e$ as pretendin% in a er" %eneral sense) on a Gricean account o# (17a) and
21
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(17b) no speech act o# assertion is per#ormed and the spea&ers meanin% consists solel"
o# implicatures$ +oweer he seems to hae drawn the line at appro!imations
describin% cases similar to (17c) as ma&in% %enuine assertions in which a word is used
'loosel" in a rela!ed wa" which the nature o# the conte!t o# utterance ma&es
permissible (Grice 16751 4@)$ .ecent accounts o# metaphor and h"perbole treat
them as #ormin% a continuum with loose use and rou%h appro!imation and hence as
ma&in% %enuine (thou%h not strictl" literal) assertions (>arston 2002, .ecanati 2004,
;perber and ilson in press, ilson and ;perber 2002)$ *# these accounts are on the
ri%ht lines there is no alid ar%ument #rom the premise 'This utterance does not hae
the #orce o# a serious literal speech act to the conclusion 'This utterance is a case o#
pretence$
The echoic account does not treat iron" as #ormin% a continuum with loose use
metaphor and h"perbole, howeer as ar%ued in section 3 it does treat ironical
utterances as #ormin% a natural class with other t"pes o# interpretie attributie or
echoic use$ *# this account is on the ri%ht lines then either all interpretiel" used
utterances must be treated as cases o# pretence or none can$ * want to ar%ue that none are
appropriatel" anal"sed as cases o# pretence$
The pretence account is particularl" inappropriate #or interpretie uses in which the
spea&er tacitl" or oertl" metarepresents an abstract lo%ical or conceptual content rather
than an attributed utterance or thou%ht$ >onsider the tacitl" metarepresentational () and
(10) (repeated here #or conenience) and the more e!plicit ersions in (1) and (1)
() a$ ;ome propositions are tautolo%ies$ b$ Bor instance a tall man is a man$
(10) a$ /ost le!ical concepts are atomic$ b$ TKP+9A K>T.9A >??G$
(1) The #ollowin% proposition is tautolo%ical a tall man is a man$(1) Ke!ical concepts includin% TKP+9A K>T.9A and >??G are atomic$
*n (b) and (1) the spea&er is not pretendin% to ma&e an assertion or imitatin% some
other person or t"pe o# person$ +er behaiour tone o# oice manner o# articulation
#acial e!pression etc$ are not intended to resemble those o# an" other person or t"pe o#
person she is spea&in% in her own oice and usin% lan%ua%e purel" to pic& out a
proposition that she wants to brin% to her hearers mind$ The same point applies to (10b)
22
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and (1) in which the concepts TKP+9A K>T.9A and >??G are mentioned
rather than used$ /" claim is that when the main point o# an interpretiel" used
utterance is to pic& out a content or meanin% H whether a purel" abstract meanin% as in
these e!amples or the meanin% o# an attributed thou%ht or utterance H this is not
appropriatel" described as a case o# mimicr" simulation or pretence$ 9ne cannot mimic
or simulate a content a meanin% or a thou%ht$ The pretence account o# iron" wor&s onl"
#or cases where an element o# mimicr" or simulation o# behaiour is inoled$
To illustrate this point consider the tacitl" attributie utterances in (11b) and (12b)
(repeated here #or conenience) and their more e!plicit counterparts in (20) and (21)
(11) a$ The 8ean spo&e up$ b$ The uniersit" was in crisis$
(12) a$ The students were thou%ht#ul$ b$ *# the" didnt act now it mi%ht be too late$
(20) ccordin% to the 8ean the uniersit" was in crisis$
(21) The students were thin&in% that i# the" didnt act now it would be too late$
The spea&er o# these utterances chooses an indirect rather than a direct #orm o#
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+oweer indirect reports o# speech and thou%ht such as (11)-(12) or (20)-(21) need
inole no mimicr" or 'pra%matic insincerit" the spea&er is %enuinel" reportin% a
content or meanin% rather than pretendin% to do somethin% else$
*n #act not een all echoic utterances are plausibl" anal"sed as cases o# pretence$ The
most obious problems #or the pretence account are raised b" echoic onsider ;ues echoic response to ac& in (14b) aboe (repeated here
#or conenience)
(13) ack: * had dinner with >homs&" last ni%ht$
(14) b$ %ue: Lou had dinner with >homs&"C *s he in n%landC
*t is hard to see this as a case o# 'pra%matic insincerit" or 'ma&in% as i# to sa"$ ;ue is
echoin% ac&s immediatel" precedin% utterance in order to show that she is thin&in%
about its content and to e!press her reaction to it$ *n the interpretation * am considerin%
here ;ue does not intend to be understood as imitatin% ac& or simulatin% his
behaiour the onl" releant resemblances between her utterances and his are in content
rather than #orm$
Aow consider echoic responses such as (14a) (repeated below)
24
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(13) ack: * had dinner with >homs&" last ni%ht$
(14) a$ %ue: Lou had dinner with >homs&"I hat did he sa"C
*n (14a) ;ue echoes ac&s precedin% remar& in such a wa" as to indicate that she
accepts it and wants to e!press her surprise and pleasure at the #act that it is true$ *t
seems entirel" inappropriate to treat this as a case o# 'pra%matic insincerit" or 'ma&in%
as i# to sa"$ ;ue is not pretendin% to assert an"thin% she is acceptin% ac&s assertion
and e!pressin% her reaction to it$ 9r consider cases o# dela"ed acceptance or
endorsement such as (23b) (#rom ;perber and ilson 16 23)
(23) a$ *eter: *ts a loel" da" #or a picnic$
DThe" %o #or a picnic and the sun shines$E
b$ Mary: *ts a loel" da" #or a picnic indeed$
+ere /ar" echoes Peters utterance in such a wa" as to ma&e it clear that she is
endorsin% it and complimentin% him on his su%%estion$ ;he need not be imitatin% Peter
or mimic&in% his behaiour what matters (in the interpretation * am considerin% here) is
the resemblance in content between her utterance and his$
choic utterances can cone" a wide ariet" o# attitudes$ Bor instance the echoic
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(24) a$ *eter: *ts a loel" da" #or a picnic$
DThe" %o #or a picnic and it rains$E
b$ Mary: *ts a loel" da" #or a picnic indeed$
+ere /ar" echoes Peters utterance in such a wa" as to ma&e it clear that she does not
beliee it and perhaps to criticise him #or his su%%estion$ *n both cases she spea&s in her
own oice and e!presses her own attitude the onl" di##erence between (23b) and (24b)
is in the t"pe o# attitude e!pressed$ ;o i# echoic endorsements such as (23b) are not
anal"sed as cases o# pretence neither should ironical dissociations be$
>urrie (in press 12@) ar%ues that echoic endorsements such as (23b) and ironical
dissociations such as (24b) di##er in one important respect which ma&es it le%itimate to
anal"se ironical dissociations and not echoic endorsements as cases o# pretence$
;uppose that Peter responds to /ar" b" sa"in% (2@)
(2@) Les *m so %lad we decided to come$
s a response to the echoic endorsement in (23b) Peters utterance would be naturall"
understood as a %enuine non-echoic assertion$ s a response to the echoic endorsement
in (24b) howeer it would be naturall" understood as a continuation o# the iron"$ *n
>urries terms iron" 'opens the door to pretendin% and Peters response to /ar"s
ironical utterance 'would naturall" be seen as an elaboration o# /ar"s pretence (ibid
12@)$ +e is thus prepared to treat /ar"s utterance in (24b) as a case o# pretendin% in an
'actie 'substantial sense while ar%uin% that echoic endorsements and other t"pes o#
#ree indirect
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b$ +e almost won he thin&s$
c$ Poor #ool$ +e thin&s he almost won$
d$ +e almost won$ lle%edl"$
*t would be
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content not in #orm$ *n iron" in #act the spea&er %ies up the opportunit" #or mimicr"
or simulation in order to e!press her own attitude in her own tone o# oice$
This is not to sa" that utterances based on the e!ploitation o# perceptual
resemblances cannot be used to achiee ironical e##ects$ s noted aboe in section 3 a
spea&er ma" adopt the tone o# oice or manner o# articulation o# some other person or
t"pe o# person in order to ma&e #un o# them their wa" o# spea&in% or the thou%hts the"
hae e!pressed (;perber and ilson 11, ;perber 14, ilson and ;perber 12)$
;uch utterances are indeed simulations and are o#ten used to witt" or ironical e##ect$
>onsider (27)-(30)
(27) Punctualit" is the thie# o# time$ (9scar ilde)
(2) mon% the smaller duties o# li#e * hardl" &now an" more important than that o#
not praisin% where praise is not due$ (;"dne" ;mith)
(2) critic is one who leaes no turn unstoned$ (Geor%e ?ernard ;haw)
ach o# these parodies or alludes to another utterance that resembles it in #orm$ *n (27)
ilde ma" be seen as dissociatin% himsel# #rom the sa"in% *rocrastination is the thief
of time and in (2) ;"dne" ;mith ma" be seen as e!pressin% some scepticism about the
idea that we should alwa"s %ie praise where praise is due$ en (2) which could be
seen simpl" as wordpla" ma" be intended to ma&e a more serious point about the
contrast between a drama critics :ob and an ordinar" :ob$ lthou%h these utterances
achiee their e##ects b" e!ploitin% perceptual resemblances or resemblances in #orm
the" are still not appropriatel" anal"sed as cases o# pretence$ *n each case the spea&er
could be usin% them to per#orm a %enuine speech act while simultaneousl" alludin% to
another one$ +ere a%ain ironical e##ects are achieed without an" element o# pretence$The t"pe o# iron" that does inole pretence is the one sometimes described in the
literature as 'impersonation iron" (c#$ ;imonin #orthcomin%) where the spea&er (or
writer) adopts a persona in order to criticise or ma&e #un o# those who spea& or thin& in
similar wa"s$ The best-&nown e!amples are ;wi#ts ' /odest Proposal and 8e#oes
'The ;hortest a" with 8issenters both intended to satirise political iews o# the
time$ ;ince * thin& Aeil ;mith would en:o" it and with man" than&s to the pretence
theorists whose wor& * #ind both enrichin% and proocatie * will end b"
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#irst two para%raphs o# ;tephen Keacoc&s essa" re the 0ich Happy, which is indeed a
case o# pretence used to achiee ironical e##ects
Ket me admit at the outset that * write this essa" without adeurrie #or inspiration challen%e and
allowin% me to see an earl" ersion o# his #ascinatin% paper on pretence accounts o#
iron"$ Than&s also to .ob"n >arston and Mladimir e%arac #or insi%ht#ul comments on
an earlier ersion and to two anon"mous re#erees$ This paper is part o# the +.>-#unded pro:ect Q Oni#ied Theor" o# Ke!ical Pra%matics (.163@6), * am er" %rate#ul
to .ob"n >arston and the other members o# the pro:ect team$
2
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3@
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Tel$ U44-16@-62470, #a! U44-16@-62470$
'4mail address: deirdreVlin%$ucl$ac$u& (8$ ilson)$
1 9n the e##ectieness o# di##erent clues in the perception o# iron" see ?r"ant and Bo! Tree (2002)
>olston and 9?rien (2000a b) Gerri% and Goldar% (2000) JreuF and .oberts (1@) and .oc&well
(2000)$2 9n the deelopment o# iron" see >apelli and Aa&a%awa (10) >reusere (1 2000) Jeenan and
ui%le" (1) Aa&assis and ;nede&er (2002) and inner (1)$ 9n impairment or brea&down see
Giora et al$ (2000) +appS (13) Kan%don 8aies and >oltheart (2002) /c8onald and Pearce
(16) and ;mith and Tsimpli (1@)$
3 Possible e!amples include the ironical idioms fat chance and a precious lot presumabl" deried #rom
creatie ironies based on the metaphorical slim chance and a precious little (see ;eto 1 and
;perber and ilson 1 #or discussion)$
4 9n the debate between echoic and pretence accounts see >olston and Gibbs (in press) >urrie (in
press) >lar& and Gerri% (14) JreuF and Gluc&sber% (1) Jumon-Aa&amura Gluc&sber% and
?rown (1@) and ;perber (14)$
@ ;ee #or instance ?ooth (14) >urcR (2000) >urrie (in press) JreuF and .oberts (13) /uec&e
(16 170) Aash (1@) Perrin (16) ;imonin (#orthcomin%) ;perber and ilson (10 1)
iener (173) and Lus (2003)$
6 ;ee #or instance 8ews and inner (1) Gibbs (14) +u%l" and ;a"ward (17) ;perber and
ilson (11 16 200@) and ilson and ;perber (2002)$7 /oreoer since the #irst ma!im o# ualit" has no other pra%matic #unction in Grices #ramewor&
than to be iolated in tropes this raises a %enuine
8/20/2019 3 Wilson 06 Irony (1)
37/37
11 9n metarepresentations see >arston (16 2002) Aoh (2001) ;perber (2000a 2000b) and ilson
(2000)$ Bor eidence that iron" reurries account iron" alwa"s tar%ets a Qrestrictie or de#ectie iew o# the world or part o# the world,
but it is not clear wh" entertainin% a er" %eneral hope or wish that thin%s should %o well the weather
should be nice etc$ should be seen as hain% a restrictie or de#ectie iew o# the world$
17 That is one ma" not actuall" be endorsin% it but onl" pretendin% or seemin% to$
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