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William Empson ‘Ambiguity’, for 6th Semester:


William Empson ‘Ambiguity’, for 6th Semester:by Podmeswar

According to Empson, an ambiguity in ordinary speech, means something very pronounced and as a rule witty or deceitful. The word may be stretched absurdly far, but it is descriptive because it suggests the analytical mode approached. In extended sense, any prose statement could be called ambiguous.
                The word ‘ambiguity’ is taken from Empson’s book ‘Seven Types of Ambiguity’. He divides the book into seven different categories of ambiguous meaning as following:
1.The parts of language used effectively in multiple ways suddenly.
2.Different meanings that can be determined based on the author’s one intended meaning
3.The unconnected meaning that results from word usage like what we see in puns.
4.The different meanings that when connected an reveal the complicated state of the author’s mind.
5.What he calls ‘fortunate confusion’ which are specifically similes that imply two conflicting meanings showing the author on discovering his ideas in the act of writing.
6.Contradictory and irrelevant meanings that require a reader to drive his/her own interpretations.
7.Statements which are so contradictory, they show the author’s mind was divided.
        Smith found ambiguity of Empson used to the fact that ambiguous can have a range of two or more possible meanings while Empson used it in multiple possible meanings. Empson responded to Smith’s criticism. He argues that he has not used things like puns as ambiguous simply because puns “Say two things as once.”
                Empson argues that ambiguity occurs when one can puzzle over an author’s meaning, seeing multiple possible alternative views “without sheer misreading.” Empson’s boon of ambiguity been criticized for organization and Empson confused that many of his examples of ambiguity overlapped.
                     However in spite of criticism Empson usages of the term ambiguous and organization, his book is praised as revealing meanings in poetry.


Note: This is only for understanding & conceptual, kindly read the main text also.