In Philippe de Brabanter (ed.),
Hybrid Quotations. John Benjamins. pp. 129-151 (
2005)
Copy
BIBTEX
Abstract
Quotation marks are ambiguous, although the conventional rules that govern their
different uses are similar in that they contain quantifications over quotable
expressions. Pure uses are governed by a simple rule: by enclosing any expression
within quotation marks one gets a singular term, the quotation, that stands for the
enclosed expression. Impure uses are far less simple. In a series of uses the quotation
marks conventionally indicate that (part of) the enclosed expression is a contextually
appropriate version of expressions uttered by some relevant agent. When the quotation
marks have this meaning, it is tempting to think of them as contributing that indication
to the truth-conditional content of the utterance. I adopt a cautious attitude towards
this hypothesis, for the evidence in its favor is inconclusive. In other uses the
quotation marks conventionally indicate that the enclosed expression should be used
not “plainly” but in some broadly speaking “distanced” way, or that it is being so used
by the utterer, and typically context makes clear the exact nature of the “distance” at
stake. In these cases the quotation marks do not even appear to contribute that
indication to the truth-conditional content of the utterance.