Abstract:
Interpersonal relationships are enacted during interaction where they are created,
maintained, or transformed through language use. Whereas it has been argued in
linguistic pragmatic studies that impoliteness is used to exercise power, little has been
done to show how power relations are contextually challenged and readjusted between
interactants by means of their impolite talk. This study, situated in sociopragmatics
within linguistic pragmatics, sought to fill the gap by analyzing how participants in
Kirundi fictional conversations used impolite metapragmatic comments (MPCs) to
exercise power, readjust and redefine power relations between them. The objectives of
the study were to examine lexically encoded impolite MPCs and their implicated
meanings of power relations, to analyze impolite MPCs involving grammatical
manipulations and the meanings of power relations they convey, and to examine
impolite MPCs with rhetorical strategies and their use to express power relations. The
philosophical stance of this study was social constructivism, considering meanings as
socially constructed between human beings. The research was qualitative in nature. It
is an inquiry into verbal strategies and interpersonal meanings in impolite
metacommunication. The study looked into the meanings of power relations negotiated
between Kirundi fictional interactants through impolite MPCs. The Discourse Analysis
method was used in the study. The theory underpinning the study was Jonathan
Culpeper’s Sociocognitive Model for Understanding Impoliteness. Using purposive
sampling, the researcher collected 41 Kirundi fictional texts in which impolite MPCs
were used, comprising 30 excerpts of audio-recorded conversations from Ninde plays,
10 excerpts of written conversations from ‘written plays’ and 1 excerpt of a written
conversation from the category ‘other written texts’, the number of which was
determined by the criterion of thematic saturation during the iterative process of data
collection, analysis, and interpretation. The findings of the study indicated that
impoliteness in interaction is closely associated with the exercise of power, in
agreement with previous studies. Besides, it was found that speakers used different
linguistic and rhetorical strategies in impolite MPCs to evaluate speech as inappropriate
and to exercise power, often in the sense of readjusting power relations. Lexically,
speakers manipulated an array of verbs to express different negative evaluations of their
co-communicators’ speech behavior. Morphological strategies included the use of
augmentative and diminutive affixes, coinage, and compounding. Syntactic choices
were also made like the manipulation of modality, lexical and clausal substitution, and
elliptical and evidential constructions. Finally, speakers used the rhetorical devices of
repetition, parallelism, irony, metaphor, simile, hyperbole, metonymy, as well as
wordplay expressed as phonetic play, sounds in onomatopoeic form and homonymy.
The findings showed that intensification or more markedness of impoliteness in MPCs
implied their use to achieve readjustment or redefinition of power relations. The study
filled the gap concerning how interactants challenge power relations via linguistic
means and in context. It concluded that impoliteness is strongly associated with exercise
of power and that contextually relevant linguistic and/or rhetorical strategies contribute
to either reinforcing or challenging power relations.