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<title>THE PRAGMATICS OF APOLOGY IN SELECTED PLAYS OF WOLE SOYINKA AND OLA ROTIMI</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2388</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-08T07:18:48Z</dc:date>
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<title>THE PRAGMATICS OF APOLOGY IN SELECTED PLAYS OF WOLE SOYINKA AND OLA ROTIMI</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2389</link>
<description>THE PRAGMATICS OF APOLOGY IN SELECTED PLAYS OF WOLE SOYINKA AND OLA ROTIMI
ODEKUNBI, Sunday Kehinde
Apology, a face-supporting act that maintains harmony between interactants in&#13;
discourses, also occurs in drama texts, including those of Wole Soyinka and Ola&#13;
Rotimi. Extant linguistic studies on apology largely focused on the functions and&#13;
strategies for realising apologies in different languages and cultures, with scant&#13;
attention paid to the use of apologies in drama texts. This study was, therefore,&#13;
designed to investigate the deployment of apology in selected plays of Wole Soyinka&#13;
and Ola Rotimi, with a view to determining their types, contexts and pragmatic acts.&#13;
John Gumperz’s Theory of Interactional Sociolinguistics, complemented by M. A. K.&#13;
Halliday’s Systemic Functional Grammar and Jacob Mey’s Pragmatic Acts Theory,&#13;
was adopted as the framework. The descriptive design was used. Wole Soyinka and&#13;
Ola Rotimi were purposively selected because of their literary versatility and&#13;
prominent deployment of apology in their plays. Four texts (two from each playwright)&#13;
were purposively selected because of their thematic relevance. The ones from Wole&#13;
Soyinka were Alapata Apata (AA) and Kongi’s Harvest (KH), while those from Ola&#13;
Rotimi were The Gods Are Not to Blame (TG) and Our Husband Has Gone Mad Again&#13;
(OH). The data were subjected to pragmatic analysis.&#13;
Four types of apology were identified: review apology, constraint apology, offence-&#13;
reducing apology and routine apology. These apology types captured the rationale for&#13;
apology performance in the texts. Review and constraint apology types are motivated&#13;
by self-realisation of mistakes committed and prevention of imminent problems.&#13;
Offence-reducing apology downplays the seriousness of an offence committed, while&#13;
routine apology reveals the role of power in apology performance. Four context types&#13;
were found: cultural, political, elitist and cognitive. Cultural context captures apologies&#13;
that are employed when cultural issues are discussed, and it is found in all the apology&#13;
types (OH, TG and AA and KH). Political context embraces the discourse of politics-&#13;
related issues and features in routine and offence-reducing apology types (OH). Elitist&#13;
context captures apology performance influenced by educational and intellectual&#13;
superiority, and it manifests in offence-reducing apology (OH). Cognitive context&#13;
projects apologies influenced by mental realisation of offence committed; this&#13;
manifests in review apology (TG, AA and OH). Four categories of practs characterise&#13;
the apologies, namely wrong-admitting, relationship-mending, favour-seeking and&#13;
wrong-ascribing. The practs indicate the implications of the apologies for enhancing&#13;
individual self-assessment and ensuring social cohesion. Wrong-admitting practs&#13;
indicate admittance of offence; they manifest the allopracts of pleading, regretting,&#13;
soothing, disdaining and repairing (AA, TG, KH and OH). The relationship-mending&#13;
practs capture relationship-restoring capacity of apologies; they display the allopracts&#13;
of pleading, regretting, soothing, disdaining and repairing (AA, OH, TG and KH).&#13;
Favour-seeking practs have pleading allopracts (AA and TG). Wrong-ascribing practs&#13;
demonstrate opposing and ignoring allopracts (OH).&#13;
The apology types in the selected plays of Wole Soyinka and Ola Rotimi and practs in&#13;
different contexts reflect the harmony-restoration orientation of apologies.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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