AN ANALYSIS OF POLITENESS IN HAUSA CONDOLENCE: A CASE STUDY OF TSAFE LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREA OF ZAMFARA STATE
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Abstract
The study aims at showing the importance of politeness in condolences in Hausa and
how it promotes harmony and understanding among the people using Tsafe local
government area as a case study. However, the three tape-recorded texts analyzed have
been selected out of nine texts recorded using simple random sampling. The researcher
uses Brown and Levinson’s (1987) Face Saving Theory of Politeness which was built
around the notions of “face” and “face-threatening-acts” (FTAs). The data were
obtained in a free and natural setting by the use of participant observation of real life
situation and tape-recording of actual conversation in condolence sessions by the
researcher and the data were subsequently transcribed, translated and analyzed.
Consequently, the study reveals that politeness is a reciprocal venture. Death-talks
particularly condolences are potentially face-threatening-acts and the level of politeness
involved is informed by the relative gap in terms of power and social distance between
the speaker and the addressee(s). There are substantial evidences from the data that
show how interactants employed various politeness strategies, particularly the positive
politeness and negative politeness strategies. There are also instances where various
indirect and, euphemistic expressions were used politely to express condolences in a
less offensive manner.
