Ноземна філологія inozemna philologia 2007. Вип. 119(2). С. 3-9 2007. Issue 119(2). Р. 3-9

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Криза в родині та родина в кризі – провісники
Playing patterns in literature for youngest readers
Temu dała do miseczki, temu dała do garsteczki (this one got in the bowl and that one in the hand)
Zabawa myszek (Playing Mice)
Goście w glinianym dzbanku (Guests in the Clay Jug)
Raz, dwa, trzy/ wychodź ty! (one two, three/ you leave)
Jedzie rowerek na spacerek… (the little bicycle is going for a walk)
Raz, dwa, trzy, cztery/ maszeruje Huckelberry… (One, two, three, four, Huckelberry is marching)
Idzie rak, nieborak…(A crayfish, poor creature is going)
Bajka o gęsim jaju… (Story about the Goose’s Egg…)
Ігрові моделі в літературі для наймолодших читачів
Cognitive tools in the description of children
Key words
Operational notions of cognitive linguistics as tools of analyses of speech malfunctions (dyslogia)
Different “frames of a scene”-the categories of picturing
A direct linguistic picture
The frame of the scene created by a deaf child.
An indirect linguistic picture
A holistic picture of a scene?
Когнітивні засоби в зображенні дітей з вадами розвитку
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КРИЗА В РОДИНІ ТА РОДИНА В КРИЗІ – ПРОВІСНИКИ

ТРЕТЬОЇ ЗОЛОТОЇ ЕРИ ДИТЯЧОЇ ЛІТЕРАТУРИ


Magdalena Nowacka


У статті досліджено зображення сім’ї у британській дитячій літературі. Аналіз сто­сується періоду з Першого Золотого Віку (1860–1914) і до сучасності. Увагу зосе­ред­жено на творчості Енн Файн та Жаклін Уілсон, які сприймає автор як представ­ників нового періоду в літературі в контексті історії сімейних оповідань.


Key words: сімейне оповідання, дидактична функція літератури, іронія, “чорний гумор”, дитяча точка зору, child’s agency


УДК 821.162.1’06-93:371.695


PLAYING PATTERNS IN LITERATURE FOR YOUNGEST READERS


Alicja Ungeheuer-Gołąb


Rzeszów University, Poland


The article pays attention to anthropological and cultural contexts associated with the development of literature for the youngest readers. The author states that the culture play theory of Roger Caillois can become the source of interesting conclusions concerning the reception of literature by children. She draws attentions to the existence of playing patterns of kinetic character rooted in the anthropological theory which can have an archetype basis resulting from their genealogy.

According to the author especially interesting are short simple texts originating from pre-literary forms when the essence of the story was not the neat content but the way of its transmission. On the example of Ewa Szelburg-Zarembina chain stories from the collection Wesołe historie (Funny stories) she points to the linear pattern determining the character of literature reception by a child. She gives examples of selected texts whose structure follow kinetic pattern of plays as for example snake or train.


Texts of folk origin appeared and will appear in collections of literary works for children, together with texts taken from literature for adults and adapted for children and texts written according to didactic patterns4. The diversity of such texts (mętowania - rhythmical scansion of rhymed words, counting-out rhymes, playing in a circle, quizzes, lullabies etc.) points to the need of their classification and the variety of motives determine the examination of role they fulfill in child perception. Especially interesting are short simple texts originating from pre-literary forms when the essence of the story was not the neat content but the way of its transmission. Looking back at the development of culture we can notice that the first “texts” were transmitted by pictures (picture writing, Lascaux paintings) and movement (dances and rituals). Spontaneous expression connected with rituals of first human tribes5 manifested in plays that Johann Huizinga assumes to be the source of culture [6, p. 11–47]. So movement, kinetic and gesture forms can be assumed to be the first forms transmitting content. The reality containing the activities similar to primitive culture activities is the reality of a little child. Before we can transform the expressive, spontaneous forms of behaviour into a play or game it is unlimited pure expression called by the sociologist Roger Caillois paidia. Caillois distinguished four elements that constitute the essence of play6: agon (competence), alea (fate), mimicry (imitation), ilinx (stupefaction). The researcher puts them between two extremes “one end with the prevailing rule of debauchery, free improvisation and carefreeness manifesting in unlimited flourishing imagination called paidia” and the other end - spontaneity disappearing in favour of “growing need to conform spontaneity to certain arbitrary conventions (…) this other tendency is called ludus” [4, p. 22]. Transmitting this theory to child literature you can notice how certain types of texts and connected with them receptive activities match with this theory. Alicja Baluch, the researcher and expert in child literature undertook such transmission pointing that certain types of play distinguished by Caillois determine certain literary activities. The author calls them ars and mentions that “they originate from clear paidial sources, that through ludus aim at developed artistic forms – ars [2, p. 115]. Ludus contains in itself human playing activities, dances, pranks and capers that can become patterns as many other forms of culture. In ars area we find literary texts of various origin genetically connected with play patterns such as chain stories, fables, didactic rhymes, songs.

Plays described by Caillois lead to playing patterns of kinetic character rooted in the anthropological theory which can have an archetype basis resulting from their genealogy. Linear pattern originating from plays classified according to Caillois typology is one of them. It contains plays in which kinetic pattern has the shape of a line such as a snake or train. In case of alea7 it appears in counting-out rhymes where the quirk of fate decides about the essence of play and the rhythmical construction gives the impression of marching ahead. In agon it appears as a constant running forward to stay the best what is visible not only in sports contests but also in mind involving plays (draughts, chess). It is presented in early forms of verbal folklore such as tongue twisters, mocking rhymes and riddles. In ilinx8 form movement forward is a free non-restricted running forward very often accompanied by shouting as aloud as possible giving the effect of stupefaction (for example running on the sloping area). It can be represented by texts of song type with linear character with repeated refrains. The pattern of snake features is mostly matched with imitation i.e. mimicry9. As the motif of “wandering for” appears here and the necessity to follow the pattern that is situated “in front of” the child. It happens in the play Ojciec Wergiliusz (Father Wergiliusz) in the kindergarten period and earlier when the child unconsciously imitates her mom, dad or siblings and in the later period when the same age friends become the centre of interest. This ability is illustrated by first rhymed forms repeated by a child, texts connected with imitating plays and short rhymes and didactic stories that contain “pattern to follow”.

As time and place of this presentation is limited I would like to present only the considerations concerning the linear pattern and I would like to add that some other patterns based on the structure of circle or spiral exist.

The icon sign illustrating life in the best way the essence of is line what is illustrated by a well known metaphor “life line”. This line can be noticed in the kinetic patterns of dances of procession character, rituals or for examples pilgrimages to holy places and simple child plays. Little children wander step by step following the wooden toy put on the stick or pull a car on the rope. Their route is determined by wandering line. When a bit older children while playing create a “rope”, row, chain or “snake” that moves in the room or in the garden we call it the imitation of line sign in child plays. Such arrangements, originating from the wandering of folk motives, came to the simplest texts for children such as counting-out rhymes and chain stories10.

Looking for the origin of linear pattern we can look back as far as Paradise reality when the first people came away from God and then they tried to come back to him [3, p. 564]. Religious rituals originating from this fact such as pilgrimages and processions have the same linear pattern. Probably they went back to the period long before Christ. Before the history of Adam and Eve was recorded, in many cultures the myth of “lost paradise” appeared, paradise where people lived in close everyday contact with deity”[1, p. 17]. Losing safe shelter near God determined later eternal human longing for everything connected with paradise. So people try to get back to the place where they will be happy. Their wanderings have various forms. One of theses forms is a line.

In the first myths concerning ascension we can meet a shaman who starts a mental journey [1, p. 25]. The shaman comes back changed. He undergoes the metamorphosis that is the result of the covered route and the goal of the journey he reaches. In prehistoric times we talk about, the hunters left their homes to look for food. Such expeditions were dangerous and men risked their life during them. They started their journey hoping to come back and their routes later became roads. So in schemes related to mythology or fairy tale we can find the situation of departing from home, leaving the nest that can be connected with the fate of every human. According to Karen Armstrong, the writer and the researcher of myths “the wandering of a shaman is, just like a dangerous trip of a hunter, the confrontation with death” [1, p. 27–28]. Human life, the route a person follows is such a confrontation as well.

In genological considerations the symbol of snake, in the anthropological context, has the non-trivial meaning as well. Andrzej Wierciński, anthropologist and religion specialist reaches the time of upper Paleolithic Age and he tries to find there the first picture symbols: basic symbol – the figure of a woman and the additional symbols such as moon, toad, snake, bee, butterfly and axe. The researcher presents the analogizing associations resulting from the attributes of natural snake form. For the needs of this paper it is important to associate the unusual vitality, diversified mobility and the possibility of quick moving of a snake with the symbol of indestructible power and live energy [12, p. 203], that can illustrated as the energy moving “forward” – its graphical picture a line. It is interesting that among theses associations we can find others that can be the origins of graphic and kinetic representations of playing patterns. They are as follows: circle (circular movement), spiral, braid (interlace­ment and unity of opposites in movement), stupefying activity connected with strong emotions of desire, anger, hatred, greed and envy [14, p. 203]. These symbols and activities and emotions originating from them are connected with playing theory of R. Caillois, where competence, submission to fate, stupefaction and imitation seem to emerge from the anthropological sources of the development of prehistoric societies.

So the archetype picture of playing pattern of line shape generated by the simplest types of literature for children have deep hidden meaning. It is the manifestation of the syncro­nicity between movement and word common for humanity and preserved by word.

Simple folk and child counting-out rhymes contain the counting-out motive that pe­netrates into literary texts (12, p. 114]. It is visible in poems and prose. We can find linear pattern mainly in rhymes containing arrangement scheme resulting from the necessity of classification and systematization of the world. The first attempts to classify the reality by humans can be noticed in primitive civilizations as the attempts to define and create rules of time, architecture and rituals. These first attempts are illustrated as well by rhythmical ele­ments occurring in music, fine art, architecture and literature. In case of a child it is ma­nifested by the desire to put things in lines and series (a child playing with cars puts them in a line or arranges in a block train etc.)11.

One of the features of folk counting-out rhymes is, apart from repetitions, matching the mentioned elements as in the play about a magpie that cooked gruel. The words Temu dała do miseczki, temu dała do garsteczki (this one got in the bowl and that one in the hand) etc. can be matched in the chain story with the fragment in which every animal is matched with the proper feature: Rak – ciach! Nożycami/ Kot – drap! Pazurami/ Pies – cabas! Zębami (Crayfish – crash! With seasors. Cat – scratch! With claws! Dog – snap! With teeth! )[9, p. 74].

This way the value of order was added to the content of the poem as each hero does what it can do. We can find similar arrangement in the text of Ewa Szelburg-Zarembina Zabawa myszek (Playing Mice), where.

Tup-tup-tup…wyszedł z norki pan Gryź (Mr Gryź went out of the burrow).

Dryp-dryp-dryp…wyszła z norki pani Gryzina (Ms Gryzina went out of the burrow).

Szur-szur-szur…wyszły z norki panny Gryzianki, a było ich pięć (Gryzianki maids went out of the burrow and there were five of them.)[11, p. 76].

In the story Goście w glinianym dzbanku (Guests in the Clay Jug) counting-out is included in the text:

Kupiła raz baba na jarmarku dzbanek gliniany. Nic ten dzbanek nie robił, tylko nosił wodę. Nosił dzbanek wodę rano, nosił w południe, nosił wodę wieczorem. Nosił dzbanek wodę w poniedziałek, nosił we wtorek i środę, nosił w czwartek, piątek i sobotę. Nawet w niedzielę nie stał próżny

Once a country woman bought a clay jug at the fair. This jug did nothing but it carried water only. It carried water in the morning, at noon, and in the evening. It carried water on Monday, on Tuesday, on Wednesday and Thursday, Friday and Saturday. It even worked on Sunday[10, p. 86].

In such a description the picture of the jug carrying water is replaced by the situation of permanent character lasting for seven days of the week.

The graphic representation of the text of the type: Raz, dwa, trzy/ wychodź ty! (one two, three/ you leave) and many texts starting with numerals placed one after the other is a line and during play it is movement along line. Line and movement are as well connected with the dynamic verbal incipit of counting-out rhymes such as: it goes, it walks, it swims e.g.:12

Jedzie rowerek na spacerek… (the little bicycle is going for a walk)

Jedzie kareta, dzwonek dzwoni(the carriage is going, the bell is ringing)[8, p. 63].

Idzie woda do ogroda… (water is going to the garden) [8, p. 69].

Mknie po rzece mała łódka(little boat is scudding along the river) [7, p. 119].

Moreover the rhythmicity of the counting-out rhyme as its obligatory feature causes the images of moving, covering the distance, marching: Raz, dwa, trzy, cztery/ maszeruje Huckelberry… (One, two, three, four, Huckelberry is marching) [7, p. 102]. These rhythmi­cal motives arranging themselves in a line penetrated into literary texts poems and prose from folk literature. We can find them in the poetry of Jan Brzechwa, Danuta Wawiłow, Joanna Pollakówna, Anna Kamieńska, and in Wesołe historie (Funny Stories) by Ewa Szelburg-Zarembina.

A short story helping to catch the attention of a baby Idzie rak, nieborak…(A crayfish, poor creature is going) can become the beginning of a longer story, for example the beginning of a chain story in which the heroes, and there are many of them (usually the titles of texts present the number of heroes e.g. Bajka o gęsim jaju, raku Nieboraku, kogucie Piejaku, kaczce Kwaczce, kocie Mruczku i o psie Kruczku [Story about the Goose’s Egg, about Nieborak Crayfish, Piejak Cock, Kwaczka Duck, Mruczek Cat and Kruczek Dog]), walk ahead.

Similarly counting-out, one, two, three, four, is developing in the chain story in longer motives that create the chain structure of a text. According to Alicja Baluch such action means “following something… reflected in building various types of series e.g. a train, thread, snake” [3, p. 564]. Such systems can be found in more complicated texts as structural elements interwoven in the more complicated plot or into the artistic means enriching the values of work. Similar images following one another, one originating from the other, present the linear play pattern. The wandering usually starts because of a certain reason and very often it has an affective character, independent from the figures appearing in the text and its main reason is to follow something (someone) very interesting.

In the Bajka o gęsim jaju… (Story about the Goose’s Egg…) of Ewa Szelburg-Zarem­bina the wandering was initiated by the Egg who started to roll. The rolling motive can be found in the counting out rhymes: Toczyła się torba/ z wysokiego orła (the bag was rolling from the high eagle)13. The movement of an egg is connected with the oval shape, so rolling is its genetic feature. The egg is soon accompanied by other heroes to wander together through the world. A little child behaves similarly - when she notices a moving object she instantly gets interested, she follows the rolling ball, escaping cat, jumping frog14.

In the chain story the animals (the crayfish, cock, duck, cat and dog) follow the egg just like a kid would do it. This typical for a child and at the same time simple folk dependence can be found in more complicated works (the heroine of Alice in Wonderland of Lewis Caroll follows a bit thoughtlessly the running rabbit). The one that is followed by the others becomes the guide, so their role is important and it is important who they are. So wandering is the main subject of a fable and at the same time it is its compositional element.

The fables of Zarembina are not the only texts of this type that a little child can become familiar with. The elements creating the linear construction of the text can be found in fables of Julian Tuwim (e. g. Rzepka [Turnip]), in fables with pictures of Włodzimierz Sutiejew (e.g. Kogucik i Kaczorek [Young Cock and Young Drake]), O trzech kotkach [About Three Kittens]) in the stories of Janosch (e. g. Ach! Jak cudowna jest Panama! [How wonderful Panama is]), in the fable of Hanna Januszewska about wandering Pyza (Jak polska Pyza wędrowała [How Polish Pyza was Wandering]) or a story of Helena Bechlerowa (Kolcza­tek). These works determine the model of the reception of literary text such as linearity, going forward, movement ahead. They provoke the question: What is going to happen later? and expectation that probably the same will happen again. They start, within the process of the reception of literature by a little child, the predisposition to accept the pattern. In the wider cultural aspect this means choosing going ahead and wandering as the metaphor of life. The wanderer is the one who is looking for her place in life during permanent wandering, someone who discovers herself in wandering and tries to find her life truth in it as well. She is going ahead and, as alea points, she believes in what the lot will bring. In the literature for elder children, young people and adults the analyzed scheme can be found in the timeless motive of the eternal wanderer.


1. Armstrong K., Krótka historia mitu, Wydawnictwo Znak, Kraków 2005. 2. Baluch A., Od ludus do agora, Wydawnictwo Naukowe Akademii Pedagogicznej w Krakowie, Kraków 2005. 3. Baluch A., Wzorce zabawowe w literaturze. Od zabawy do medytacji, “Wycho­wanie w Przedszkolu” 1999, nr 8. 4. Caillois R., Gry i ludzie, Oficyna Wydawnicza Wolumen, Warszawa 1997. 5. Cieślikowski J., Wielka zabawa, Wydawnictwo im. Ossolińskich, Wrocław 1985. 6. Huizinga J., Homo ludens. Zabawa jako źródło kultury, Czytelnik, Warszawa 1985. 7. Pisarkowa K., Wyliczanki polskie, Wrocław 1989. 8. Simo­nides D., Współczesny folklor słowny dzieci i nastolatków, PWN, Wrocław – Warszawa 1976. 9. Szelburg-Zarembina E., Bajka o gęsim jaju, raku Nieboraku, kogucie Piejaku, kaczce Kwaczce, kocie Mruczku i o psie Kruczku, (in:) the same author, Wesołe historie, (in:) Przez różową szybkę, Nasza Księgarnia, Warszawa 1974. 10. Szelburg-Zarembina E., Goście w glinianym dzbanku, (in:) the same author, Wesołe historie, (in:) Przez różową szybkę, Nasza Księgarnia, Warszawa 1974. 11. Szelburg –Zarembina E., Zabawa myszek, (in:) the same author, Wesołe historie, (in:) Przez różową szybkę, Nasza Księgarnia, Warszawa 1974. 12. Ungeheuer-Gołąb A., Poezja dzieciństwa czyli droga ku wrażliwości, Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Rzeszowskiego, Rzeszów 2004. 13. Ungeheuer-Gołąb A., Ruch jako kategoria dziecięcego odbioru literatury, (in:) Problemy kształcenia literackiego w edukacji wczesnoszkolnej, edited by J. Kidy, Rzeszów 1997. 14. Wierciński A., Magia i religia. Szkice z antropologii religii, Zakład Wydawniczy „Nomos”, Kraków 1997. 15. Wygotski S., Wczesne dzieciństwo, (in:) Dziecko w zabawie i świecie języka, edited by A. Brzezińskiej i in., Wydawnictwo Zysk i S-ka, Poznań 1995.


ІГРОВІ МОДЕЛІ В ЛІТЕРАТУРІ ДЛЯ НАЙМОЛОДШИХ ЧИТАЧІВ


Аліція Унгегоєр-Ґолонб


У статті розглянуто антропологічні та культурні контексти, пов’язані з розвитком літератури для наймолодших читачів. Автор стверджує, що теорія культурної гри Рожера Кайюа може стати джерелом цікавих висновків, які стосуються сприйняття літератури дітьми. Вона звертає увагу на існування ігрових моделей кінетичного ха­рак­теру, що своїм корінням сягають антропологічної теорії, яка, можливо, має архее­типну базу як результат їхнього родоводу. На думку автора, особливо цікавими є ко­рот­кі прості тексти, що походять з долітературних форм, коли суть оповіді – не чис­тий зміст, а спосіб його передання. На прикладі оповідань-ланцюжків із збірки Єви Шельбург-Зарембіни “Веселі історії вона демонструє лінійну модель, яка визна­чає характер літературного сприйняття у дитини. Дослідниця наводить приклади виб­раних текстів, структура яких відповідає кінетичній моделі ігор, як-от змія чи поїзд.


Ключові слова: ігрова модель, оповідання-ланцюжок, теорія культурної гри, лінійна модель, кінетика.


УДК 821.162.1’06-93:159.922.7


COGNITIVE TOOLS IN THE DESCRIPTION OF CHILDREN

WITH DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS


Danuta Pluta-Wojciechowska


University of Bielsko-Biała, Poland


A child with developmental disorders as a subject of research work is an object of interest to many fields. Different specialists create their own descriptions taking into consideration the specific aspects of the given area of knowledge. We might suppose that the synthesis of these diagnoses will contribute to a holistic picture of a child with developmental disorders. However, we should bear in mind that different approaches to the problem put no limits on the list of possible approaches. What particularly interests us is also how the child itself approaches the problems, which is one more perspective from we observe the problems.


Key words:


A child with developmental disorders as a subject of research work is an object of interest to many fields such as medicine, psychology, pedagogy and speech therapy. Each of these disciplines creates its own description of a child taking into consideration specific aspects of a given area of knowledge. E.g. the doctor deals with anatomical and functional disturbances; the psychologist describes child’s emotional and cognitive problems; and the speech therapist describes those aspects which are connected with speaking. It might be supposed that the synthesis of these specialized diagnoses creates a holistic pic­tu­re/rep­resen­tation of a child with developmental disorders, e.g. a child with speech disorders. However, if to bear in mind Langacker’s concept of the creation of meaning, different frames/ formulations of scenes [7, 8], which we encounter in specialized descriptions, set no limit to the list of possible frames. One more perspective, namely the perspective of a child itself, may be found.

Developmental disturbances may be observed in different areas, in speech in particular. Speech, this extraordinary human skill developed during phylogenesis not only makes man distinguishable in the world but it becomes his “sign”/“phenomenon”, which is reflected in the notion homo loguens. In his work “On the Soul” Aristotle wrote, “breath is used (…) for uttering a sound and in this way for ensuring higher happiness for our being” [1, p. 99]. Is it right to paraphrase the above sentence in the following way: a speaking man is a happy man? At this stage of my article I mean not only speech but also the quality of speech as well as the involvement of speaking in communication and cognitive development.


OPERATIONAL NOTIONS OF COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS AS TOOLS OF ANALYSES OF SPEECH MALFUNCTIONS (DYSLOGIA)


Cognitive linguistics provides a good basis for the presentation of the cognitive picture that is the representation of a child with developmental disorders. The term picture/port­rait of a child when understood literally draws our attention to painting a picture of a child. On the other hand, we may pay our attention to the fact that the metaphor – believed by cognitivists to be one more sense (apart from the sense of vision, the sense of hearing, the sense of touch etc.) – plays a meaningful role in the process of learning about reality [6]. Thus the term created by means of metaphor refers to circumstances, processes, conditions of creation, construction of a notion/ picture, a cognitive domain of a child with deve­lopmental disorders. Thus when one says a portrait/a picture of a child with developmental disorders, he or she means not only the depiction of a physical appearance of a child but also a psychomotor picture, a manifold context, particularly a social context in which a child lives.

The term picture refers to picturing, which is one of the most important branches of one of the areas of cognitive linguistics. While learning about reality, man constructs meanings of created names, phrases and expressions. It is well expressed by R. Langacker: “ the meaning of the phrase is not only an array of conceptual content, but what it also involves is conventional picturing, which means the way of formulating of conceptual content delivered by recalled domain” [7, p. 18]. Thus the meaning of the phrase is not only the conceptual content of the domain or domains but also of the so-called conventional picturing or cons­t­rual. In his comment on this phenomenon, Langacker writes: “… we are able to formulate the given situation in different ways, even when we have to do with the identical conceptual content. These various formulations of the scene take different semantic values. This means that semantics of the natural language which is based on the criterion of objective truth is not possible” [7, p. 19–20]. One of the elements of picturing of the scene is its ground (or background). In order to explain the idea, Langacker indicates the fact that what is meant is the connection of one structure with another where the first structure is highlighted and the other becomes its background [7, p. 20].

For R. Langacker, whose opinions have been briefly presented here, meaning is identified with conceptualization [7, p. 30], which occurs in cognitive processing. It may be stated that while commenting on the notion “a picture of a child with speech disorders not only the final result of the process of creation of the notion should be taken into account but also the process itself and the conditions in which it is created, which is connected with conceptualization. In other words, the quality of the formulated notion, in this case the notion of a child with developmental disorders, depends on how the process of conceptuali­zation runs. Conceptualization may be interpreted as “both new and old notions; sensual feelings; kinesthetic, emotional experiences; recognition of the direct context (social, phy­sical and linguistic context)” [8, p. 30]. Thus while speaking about a picture/portrait of a child with developmental disorders, I mean the construction of the notion by different means, both linguistic and non-linguistic ones. It is worth noticing that while taking advan­tage of the theory of prototypes of E. Rosch [13, 14, 15], which is also connected with cognitive linguistics, we may look for prototypical features of a child with developmental disorders, and particularly of a child with speaking disorders, a child who stutters, is deaf, has a cleft palate [11, 12] etc.


DIFFERENT “FRAMES OF A SCENE”-THE CATEGORIES OF PICTURING


A peculiar and common way of characterizing a child with developmental disorders is a description as a linguistic category. Among other possibilities of creating a picture of a child with disorders, there may be an analysis of his or her works such as drawings or poems.

Depending on the perspective from which we examine the disorders (e.g. the disorders connected with verbal communication and, more widely, in communication), we may distinguish, speaking generally and operationally, two ways of depicting a portrait of a child with developmental disorders, namely direct and indirect picturing. The former has the characteristics of manifold expression of inner difficulties and experiences, which are rooted in actual disorders of a child. Here, from this perspective, we have to do with accounts, e.g. poems or drawings – works with different forms- which reflect and illustrate experiences of a child. Among them, we may find linguistic texts created by a child. Within them, there are written texts which we may call operationally direct linguistic representations because their authors are children who are active objects and subjects of such pictures.

The other kind of constructing a picture of a child refers to indirect or outer picturing, i.e. when the picture of a child is constructed by those people who are in different relations with this child. Those may be the child’s parents, specialists who treat the child, painters, writers, journalists or scholars. This particular form of creating a picture of a child includes the description of difficulties and experiences which are expressed by parents, but it may also include parents’ own experiences from which a picture of a child emerges. In this cate­gory of picturing, there are also descriptions created by specialists who deal with children with developmental disorders and deal with their therapy. If they take a linguistic form, they can be called indirect or outer linguistic pictures/ representations.

Each of the above-mentioned classes of picturing allows us to see a child from different perspectives, and these different products have different goals. The question may be asked which picture is true. If we make a hypothesis about a linguistic picture of the world, which is the result of our acceptance of Langacker’s concept, then we will also state that those two ways of linguistic picturing are created by different “frames of scenes”. Thus they may hold different semantic values. However, they may be values which complement each other and, as a result, they all have a chance to create a holistic representation.


A DIRECT LINGUISTIC PICTURE


What is particularly important for our learning about problems of children with disorders is a direct picture. Descriptions of experiences are often created in privacy at home either when subjects pour out their troubles to friends or to the psychologist in the psychologist’s surgery. They are intimate in character, often painful and rarely accessible to a wider group of receivers. On the other hand, the quality of these experiences may be difficult to describe by linguistic means and, therefore, it is a non-linguistic form of expression, such as artistic or movement expression, that is applied in the psychological therapy of children with difficulties. Exceptional forms of a direct picture are a poem, the author of which is a person who suffers problems connected with communicating, and drama. It should be added that what is meant here is not only the technique of drama used during therapeutic meetings but also the activity of writing a drama which may show us a piercing picture of a stuttering person.

The frame of the scene created by a deaf child. The exciting poems by the deaf patient – Paweł T. [16, p. 59–60], at present an adult man with whom I had the pleasure to work for a few years, may be given as illustrative examples of indirect linguistic picturing. In 2005 four of his poems were published; they were written by him when he was an adolescent. They were entitled “Deafness”; “My hearing”, “But why?”, “To hear from anyone” [16, pp. 59-60]. The titles are highly characteristic if we know that their author is deaf. The hearing aid does not make it possible to hear sounds, and among them sounds of speech, in the same way as in the case of a healthy person. We may even say that hearing by means of the aid is a certain interpretation of verbal and nonverbal sounds which reach our ears. The phrases and questions of the deaf person such as “I’m hungry! I need sounds!”, “Throughout all my life I am wandering through the desert of sound…”, “The singing of different birds is the same to me”, “I cannot distinguish music from normal talking”, “I want to know what my desire is” (desire to understand what sounds mean)” [16, p. 59–60] sound strange to us.

The characteristic feature of the mentioned poems is their emotional charge which is hidden behind the particular verses of the poems, and among the means of expression which were used in these poems metaphor holds a special place. It may be clearly seen that the author of this poetry suffers a great personal tragedy which is rooted in his hearing impair­ment. What I was able to learn about Pawel during our meetings is the fact that his present experiences connected with his deafness are not as turbulent as they were when he was an adolescent. However, he clearly states that when he was a teenage boy the writing of poems was his means of showing other people what problems he experienced and how he experienced them.

Frames of scenes created by stuttering adolescents. The unusual representation of a stuttering person emerges while reading the published memoirs of stuttering people [3, 9]. Their titles also use metaphors, which may indicate the fact that the patients distance themselves from their problems at present in the context of successful speech therapy. The title of the first work by Jan B. published in the collection “In My Eyes” is entitled “My Adventure with Stuttering” [3, p. 55] and the title of the second one by Rafał M. is “My Climb to the Top of Fluent Speaking” [9, p. 56–58]. The texts and the introduction (the author of which is a logopedist), suggest that works of stuttering people are “a means of catharsis” for them. The reader may watch a kind of a film where a man’s fight against stuttering plays a significant role. Jan B. compares his fight against stuttering with the adventure which, according to the texts, was not only successful but also allowed him to get a new perspective on his success and failure. On the other hand, Rafał M. in his descriptions of overcoming difficulties uses the metaphor of a climb and fight. He writes: “My fight against stuttering can be compared with a climb to the top of a huge steep mountain overgrown with thicket when it is possible to travel vast distances one day and only go a few steps the next day.” [9, p. 58].

One more representation of a stuttering man can be observed in the script entitled “A Drama in Three Acts” written by Grzegorz G. [4, p. 66–69]. The title is connected with the film where the great power called Matrix is in charge of a fascinating world. The people in this world are controlled and steered by this power. The metaphor used in the drama shows how big the problem the stuttering people encounter may be. The story unfolds among stuttering people who experience numerous difficulties connected with communication with others and resign from speaking, which is symbolized by sealed mouths. The vision of the world in which people pass one another silently reflects their experiences in a new dimension. The narrator notices “none of the people knew that on the outskirts of a silent reality an enclave had started to exist, a small society of freed people speaking fluently who were led by Morpheus – an enlightened logopedist.” The following scenes present, in a metaphorical way, a moment of taking decisions about logopedic therapy, the liberation from Matrix, here understood as some kind of imprisonment by stuttering. The impressive scene of tearing plasters from mouths tells us not only about the moment of taking a decision but also shows us a new perspective on life and communication [4, pp. 66-69].

The question may be asked: can we achieve such a picture of a man with problems with communication by means of a scholarly description? It is possible to name the described kind of experiences of a stuttering man by means of special notions. But is it enough for getting a complete picture?


AN INDIRECT LINGUISTIC PICTURE


A scene framed by parents. Memoirs and reflections by parents of children with disorders can be illustrative examples of an indirect linguistic picture. Such kinds of works are intimate in character and have emotional charge. What emerges from them is not only the picture of a child’s parents but also the picture of a child in the context of their joint difficulties. The example of this kind of work is the text entitled “On the Other Side of Therapy” by B. Zipper-Malina, a mother of a child with Down’s syndrome [18, pp. 61-62]. It is worth paying attention to the extract describing how they follow the specialists’ instructions: “Unfortunately, there is not enough time and energy to be simply a mother. There is no usual fun but stimulation. There are no caresses or hugging but massage or the activities that aim at making the child sensitive and agile etc. To all these things we must add a terrible feeling of guilt – that it was too late for doing something or that it was done wrongly and a sense of responsibility for anything the child can or cannot do” [18, p. 61].

A scene framed by specialists. Another kind of a picture of a child with developmental malfunctions emerges from descriptions in specialized literature. These texts or their extracts, because of their aims, can be generally divided into texts which refer to: 1) descrip­tions of the condition of a child, i.e. the description of symptoms; 2) the search for the etio­logy of disorders; 3) establishing therapeutic prognoses and programmes.

The people dealing with treatment and therapy of children with developmental malfunc­tions and with speech disorders prepare longer or shorter descriptions of children’s difficul­ties. Such descriptions are essential for taking decisions about diagnostic procedures and also later for taking decisions about prognostic and therapeutic procedures. In order to pre­pare such descriptions, specialists use the results of specialized tests, which allow for diagno­ses based on etiology. Descriptions prepared in medical institutions are more or less shortened, depending on their aims.

The characteristic feature of the published works is their concentration on those aspects of life and activities of a child where deviations from norms are observed. The description usually follows the scheme according to which an author lists characteristic features of a child, e. g. his/her anatomical structure and functioning in different areas of life. Thus the main aim of descriptions is the presentation of child’s main problems and malfunctions, e.g. at the cognitive, verbal or emotional stage etc. If the intention of an author is to explain the etiology, then descriptions are supplemented with results of tests, the main aim of which is to indicate the etiology of disorders. On the other hand, if the aim of the publication is to show means for helping a child, then there are recovery programmes with different kinds of exercises.

Descriptions of conditions of children and the etiology of disorders have a lower emotional charge and the language used in them contains specialized terminology which is not surprising since these elements are expected here. While reading this kind of literature connected with characteristics of disorders, what sometimes draws our attention is that its style bears no relation to a report or a classic description. Authors concentrate on those elements which are important from the point of view of a diagnosis and treated aspects. They take into account the description of symptoms, the typology of a disorder, the etiology, the prognosis and programmes of treatment and therapy of a child – i. e. the diagnosis and treatment or simply treatment. Linguistic pictures of a child with developmental disorders made in this way are medical, psychological, pedagogical or logopedic in nature, which depends on practical or scientific needs and the character of these needs.

While looking through specialized literature which considers scenes from various pers­pec­tives, it is possible to notice that the structure of the text is applied according to the subject; the application of specialized terminology; the usage of recognized theories, the reality. Works do not usually have a clear emotional charge, but are based on the cognitive side of a reader. On the other hand, although one may notice that an author’s intention is to present facts connected with disorders, one can also see that his/her aim is to reach and influence the emotional side of a reader. It may seem that an author’s goal is to present a child as the object and not only as the subject of their consideration. Such an effect is reached by means of different methods. Some of them may be the following: asking rheto­rical questions; application of metaphors; usage of their own feelings; quoting child’s words; describing dramatic situations; emotional titles etc. The examples of the above-mentioned means are as follows:

– The citation from a stutter’s utterance: “…I was gripped with fear and confused and lapsed into silence with white, empty circles imprinted on my mind …”[5, p. 49].

– The citation from nanny’s words which after some time contributed to the occurrence of stuttering of a little child: “lie down or a witch will come and eat you” [5, p. 60].

– The citation from the stuttering child mother’s utterance: “she pushed the words out as if she had an obstacle in her mouth” [17, p. 134].

– Rhetoric questions: “…is it proper to compare the speech of a child with cleft palate with ‘the norm’? Does it not happen that the cleft palate disorder makes children have articulation disorders? Thus their occurrence is the norm in the case of people with cleft palate?”[10, p. 200].

– The titles of chapters: “Stuttering as an iceberg”, “The therapy for stuttering – melting the iceberg”[2, p. 465–469].

– Metaphorical names for describing disorders of children with cleft palate: for speech disorders – ‘cleft speech’, for facial deformation – ‘a cleft face’.


A HOLISTIC PICTURE OF A SCENE?


The creation of a picture of a child with developmental disorders may be direct and indirect in character, which is connected with different functions of verbal and nonverbal utterances. The linguistic direct and indirect representation plays a special role in the representation of a child with developmental malfunctions and, within it, with speech development disorders. If to take it for granted that communication has a certain goal, then the indirect, direct and linguistic picturing responds to different needs and reflects intentions which are expressed in different ways and reached by means of different pictures of a scene. Pictures of a child created in this way do not compete but supplement each other.

A holistic approach to the research work on malfunctions of children draws our attention both to direct and indirect picturing. It may seem that what emerges from this kind of approach is a holistic picture of a child with developmental disorders, which not only makes it possible to describe prototypical features of a child from a specialist’s point of view but also look into the world of his/her experiences, thoughts and intentions. Is it a complete representation? We know and understand as much information as we are able to gain from our conversation with a patient or read from results of specialized tests. Language plays a crucial role, but the meaning is only conceptualization. Various linguistic forms created by children, adolescents and adults with disorders and their parents should be compulsory literature for specialists in order to see the world of their patients, the world which is sometimes quiet different from the one they know…


Summary

A child with developmental disorders as a subject of research work is an object of interest to many fields. Different specialists create their own descriptions taking into consideration the specific aspects of the given area of knowledge. We might suppose that the synthesis of these diagnoses will contribute to a holistic picture of a child with developmental disorders. However, we should bear in mind that different approaches to the problem put no limits on the list of possible approaches. What particularly interests us is also how the child itself approaches the problems, which is one more perspective from we observe the problems.

Cognitive linguistics is a good basis which serves to present the cognitive bases of creation of picture, namely the picture of a child with developmental disorders. The term picture/portrait of a child, when understood literally, draws our attention to painting a picture of a child. On the other hand, we may pay our attention to the fact that the metaphor, believed to be one more sense by the cognitivists, plays a meaningful role in the process of learning about the reality. Thus, the term created by means of metaphor refers to circumstances, processes, conditions of creation, construction of notion/picture/ cognitive domain – a child with developmental disorders. Thus, by saying a portrait/a picture of a child with developmental disorders, we mean not only the creation of a physical picture of a child but also its psycho-motor picture as well as the manifold context, and particularly the social context in which the child lives.

Depending on the perspective from which we examine the disorders, we may distinguish, speaking generally and operationally, two ways of painting a portrait of a child with developmental disorders, namely, direct and indirect ones. The former has the characteristics of manifold expression of the child’s inner experiences, which are rooted in his disorders (e.g. poems, drawings). Among them we may find texts produced by the child, e.g. written texts which we may be called operationally direct language picture, because their author is a child who is an active object and subject of drawing a picture.

The other way of constructing a picture of a child refers to an indirect or outer way of painting a picture. We mean one when the picture of a child is constructed by those people who are in different relations with a child (the child’s parents, specialists who treat the child, painters, writers, journalists or scholars).


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КОГНІТИВНІ ЗАСОБИ В ЗОБРАЖЕННІ ДІТЕЙ З ВАДАМИ РОЗВИТКУ


Данута Плута-Войцеховська


Досліджують дітей з вадами розвитку багато наук. Попри особливості цієї галузі, фахівці створюють власні описи. Можливе припущення, що синтез цих опии­сів/зоб­ражень допоможе створити цілісний портрет дитини з вадами розвитку. Однак, пот­ріб­но зважати на те, що окрім цих підходів існують ще інші – для нашого дослід­ження цікаво те, як сама дитина сприймає ці проблеми.


Ключові слова: вади розвитку, прямий та непрямий спосіб змалювання дитини з вадами розвитку, когнітивна лінгвістика, портрет дитини.