Contenu de l'article

Titre Habiter le temps : le couple imparfait/passé simple en français
Auteur Jacques Bres
Mir@bel Revue Langages
Numéro no 127, septembre 1997 Langue, praxis et production de sens, sous la direction de Paul Siblot
Page 77-95
Résumé anglais Any praxis is inscribed in time. To what extent does man's perception of time leave an inprint on Saussurian "langue" ? Revisiting a well beaten track in linguistic studies, we propose to give this farrcaching question a partial answer concerning the opposition between French imparfait and passé simple. We first capture the opposition between those two tenses in a passive way, in which man as a subject (subjected to...) bears witness to the flow of time from future to past ; we then capture the opposition in an active way, in which man as a project bears witness to the flow of time from past to future. This two-fold representation bears on the opposition between imperfect and simple past. It is shown next that linguistic theories view tenses as markers of localisation in time whereas verb forms also help mark how the time implied by the process is viewed, what orientation is given to it. Our contention is that implied time is represented in a downward fashion (particularisation) with imperfect and in an upward fashion (generalisation) with simple past.
Source : Éditeur (via Persée)
Article en ligne http://www.persee.fr/doc/lgge_0458-726x_1997_num_31_127_2126