The Art of English: Everyday creativity
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Question 
‘Language creativity(can be seen)as both including textual 
artistry and also ways in which people use language 
creativity to construct identity and manage relationships 
with others.’(Maybin and Swann, 2006, p.1)
Do you agree or disagree with the above statement? 
Creativity in language includes literary texts and 
conventionally, literary language is considered to be
distinctive - ‘non-ordinary’. Poetic structures like
conventionally, literary language is considered to be
distinctive - ‘non-ordinary’. Poetic structures like
rhymes, rhythm, repetitions and metaphors are highly valued 
as these words and phrases are arranged meticulously and 
aesthetically to create the artistic effect. However, 
contemporary language creativity is no longer an exclusive 
phenomenon. Language creativity does indeed 
include textual artistry as well as the ways people 
use it to construct identities and manage relationships. 
We will look into what exactly constitute language
creativity and examine the textual artistry of literary 
content that reside inherently in everyday language;
and lastly we will analyse how speakers unwittingly
 perform their identities while managing interactions 
and relationships in everyday discourses. 
Approaches to creativity has changed from traditional 
creativity to modern creativity. Carter(1999) distinguishes 
3 main models of literariness: Inherency model, social 
cultural model and cognition model. Inherency model using 
the textual approach dictates that creativity and 
literariness as existing in the formal properties of 
language. This poetic language is self-referential – 
where language itself is highlighted rather than the 
subjects of the discourse. The social cultural model with 
its contextual approach affirms that literary vary socially, 
culturally and historically. Anthropological studies focus 
on performance, public displays of artistic activity – 
story telling and drama in different cultures suggest that 
there is much similarity in everyday and literary performance. 
In this model anything can be defined as literary depending
on how people or culture interprets the text and within the 
social context itself. The Cognitive model refers literary 
language to mental processes by examining creativity in the 
words and sentences. Metaphorical and metonymy expressions 
inspire us to change our mental representation of the world 
and challenge us to think out of our restricted boundaries.
Language creativity is not limited to literary language. What 
is considered creativity in language also depends on the 
historical and cultural context. What is considered creative 
now may not be creative in 10 years’ time. Moreover, the 
novelty that had impacted one’s culture may not impact 
another’s. Thus language creativity is never static, instead 
it is fluid and dynamic. Creativity generally means invention, 
novelty and originality. These fresh, surprising expressions 
do not exclude the ordinary everyday language. Evidently, 
literary creativity does exist prevalently within the subtle 
innovation of purposeful everyday discourses. For instance, 
repetition in literary language is frequently used in 
everyday language for interactional effects and is driven 
fundamentally by basic human instinct to repeat and imitate. 
Thus language creativity includes the playful verbal art 
displays which use its inherent textual artistry to adorn 
interactive and communicative purposes. 
In reading literary texts one needs to read beyond its 
contents; it is its textual artistry that is significant. The 
ultimate goal of literary texts is its textual analysis –this 
is the most direct means to aesthetic enlightenment. 
Literariness of a text refers to the quality of expression 
use in literature. The poetic language used here foreground 
the formal properties of language –rhyme, rhythm and metaphor; 
here is where language draw awareness to itself. These 
elements are inherently pervasive in the playful verbal art 
of everyday communications affirming its association with 
literary language. The elements of textual artistry include: 
repetition, rhyme, pun, morphological inventiveness, metaphor 
and metonymy. 
In Repetition –the repeating of words, tone or grammatical 
structure contributes to sense of rhythm:
‘ That’s fine’
‘That’s right’
‘My baby, she is smiling’
‘Your baby, she is special’
Speakers are regularly echoing and patterning each other’s 
words to reinforce social ties, to establish commonality of 
viewpoints or explore multiple meanings. Rhyme,another poetic 
component, is commonly found in nursery rhymes as in ‘Jack 
and Jill went up the hill’. Repetition and rhyme produce a 
musically, rhythmical sensation that innately resonate deep 
within our beings. Textual artistry can be playful too: Pun 
is a form of deliberate word play for humorous or rhetorical 
effect. It treats homonyms as synonyms with ambiguous 
meanings. An example:José teacher asked him to use the words 
–green, pink and yellow in one sentence. José answered 
cheekily, "The phone go green, green, green (ringing tone), 
I pink (pick) it up, and I say yellow (hello)"
(Bilingual pun- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilingual_pun). 
This unexpected humorous effect instantly relaxes and 
refreshes our mind. You have referred to some interesting 
examples.
Additionally, metaphor which is very much associated with 
poetry,occurs frequently in daily speech. It is a figure of 
speech that compare seemingly unrelated subjects without 
using ‘as’ or ‘like’. For example, Shakespeare links 
entrances and exits to birth and death :
All the world's a stage, 
And all the men and women merely players; 
They have their exits and their entrances; 
(William Shakespeare, As You Like It)
In contrast, metonymy, another textual device, links two 
entities with related meanings. A metonymy example: 
Washington supports the bill (Washington is related to the 
president, there is contiguity between them). Metonymy 
serves as a rhetorical strategy; enables the speaker to 
implicitly hint at something by referring to things 
contiguous to it. Lastly, speakers at times engage in 
‘morphological inventiveness’ – the ability to invent new 
words by changing the structure of words – heart drawer, 
mobile earrings. 
Carter suggests that speakers are motivated to use two 
patterns; pattern–reinforcing or pattern-reforming. 
Pattern-reinforcing choices like repetitions that do not 
change the expected linguistic forms to create an affective 
convergence of viewpoint. Pattern-reforming choices like puns: 
seek to transform, invent words/expressions. They draw overt 
attention to language by re-forming them and re-shaping of 
our ways of perception. These patterns are always potentially 
present in language and speakers seek these patterns to 
reinforce harmony or to innovate.
Reading B (Guy Cook, p 41) is an excellent example of textual 
artistry in everyday language. Verbal dueling has become 
popular in contests between rappers. Terra, a rapper, tries to 
upstage another rapper who refuses to stop and pass over the 
microphone:
What happened to your apology? 1
It’s time for a little sermontology 2
That’s hypocrisy 3
You jump to the microphone 4
But you aint knocking me 5
You stepping up to poetry 6
Yeah, you know it’s me 7
Yeah it’s Terra 8
Terror- whatever you want to call me 9
In any section 10
I’m not battling you 11
I’m looking for something bigger 12
You need to be trudging 13
In some other corner of the globe 14
Some other corner of this episode. 15
This rap starts off well with the rhyme of apology, 
sermontology and hypocrisy. Repetition in lines 7, 8 begins 
with ‘Yeah’. In lines 5, 7, 9 the repetition of ‘me’ in – 
‘knocking me/ its me/call me’. In lines 11, 12 , the 
repetition continues in ‘I’m’ - I’m not battling/ I’m 
looking'. In the last two lines ‘some other corner’ is 
repeated. Both the rhyme and repetition create a rhythmic 
sensation that makes one sway with the beat. Sermontology, 
a new invented word is the morphological inventiveness. The 
pun in terra/terror has similar sound yet ambiguous in 
meaning: terra means earth and terror means horror. 
Terra/terror can also be considered a metonymy, linking two 
entities with related meanings: that is if the rapper has 
meant it to be – that the rapper (Terra) is synonymous with 
Terror. The metaphor is expressed in the globe and episode, 
comparing both seemingly unrelated subjects. Many of the 
formal properties of textual artistry are spontaneously 
expressed in this verbal dueling and this evidently supports 
the notion that literary also exist in everyday language. 
Everyday creativity, a routine phenomenon, is purposeful with 
multiple functions: to construct an identity, to manage 
relationships by entertaining(story-telling) or building 
rapport; to negotiate and to persuade or even to distance 
ourselves. All languages are considered performative and 
identity is a performative act. Language is manipulated 
creatively to communicate a specific identity. Consider an 
ordinary sentence like ‘ I will have a difficult interview 
tomorrow’ tells the audience that the speaker will need to 
exert his expertise, intelligence and communicative skills 
for this ‘difficult’ interview and that implicitly 
establishes his identity of a credible and effective 
professional. Telling stories, an instinctively natural core 
human activity in social interaction, is also a kind of 
performance. Stories are told not merely as representations 
of experience but are manipulated and performed by speakers to 
invoke different aspects of their identity and serve their 
versions of people and events. Some cultural and private 
knowledge are important to understand the story. Outsiders 
who have no access to this distinct knowledge will be 
excluded and ostracized from the group identity. On the other 
hand, stories of shared reality, shared values and shared 
intimacies further foster the group’s relationship and 
establish a greater sense of group identity. 
‘Darned dish towels’ (Maybin and Swann 2006, p 80) is an 
example of a family conversation as a performance and it 
functions in reinforcing family value, gaining group 
membership(identity)and rapport building. Ned is the son of 
Frank and Lydia. Claire is Ned’s wife and Sherry is the wife 
of Ned’s brother. 
Frank: Grandma Imhof, she was the stingy one.
Ned: Claire has darned dish towels
Frank: Her mother did it. Sure.
Lydia: Well see I said if you grew up in a house 
where your mother (patched washcloths).
Ned: (Remember darning, Sherry?)
Well, it’s when you don’t want to say damn dish 
towels.(General laughter)
Don’t you call that process darning?
Lydia: But my mother just put them under the sewing 
machine and took two washcloths and made one. And 
patched themiddle of a washcloth when it was worn 
out.And I said when you grow up like that it’s hard 
to get with this world that throws things away.
Claire:(arriving) Here are darned dish towels.
Sherry: Huhhuh darned dish towels.
Lydia: but were you ever embarrassed, Claire? When 
you invited friends to our house, did you ever 
have to be embarrassed? I was embarrassed when
the girls from town came.(laughter)
And saw my mother’s patched washcloths. 
I tried to hide them really fast.
Sherry: We had a – my mom always had like a dish cloth 
that had holes in it? And I always still get 
holes in them before I throw them away. And he’s 
like going, ‘Don’t you think we need a new dish 
towel?’ And she always had an old green pad that 
she used to scrub the pans with. And we always 
called it that ratty green pad. And so in 
my mind it’s supposed to be like really awful 
and ratty. Before you throw it away huhhahaha. 
And once a year I buy two new dish cloths 
whether I need them or not hehehe.
Lydia’s story can be seen as a performance of family 
entertainment; at the same time it serves to express herself 
and to impress upon Sherry, a new family member, of her 
family virtue: frugality. When Lydia said ‘And I said when 
you grow up like that it’s hard to get with this world that 
throws things away.’ she is endorsing the value of frugality. 
Though Lydia states that she was embarrassed about her 
mother’s thriftiness when ‘the girls from town’ came and saw 
her mother’s patched washed clothes, she asserts that she 
values frugality again, implicitly. ‘the girls from town’ 
implies their spendthrift habits which sharply contrast with 
her mother’s valued thriftiness. Although Claire has only 
one line ‘Here are the darn dish towels’ , this simple 
statement is significant because it shows that she has 
adopted Ned’s family’s virtue: frugality and thus has gained 
approved family membership. Sherry, who has recently married 
into the family is eager to establish her identity as part of 
the family membership. Sherry tells her mother’s story: that 
her mother always had a dish cloth with holes in it and that 
Sherry always throw dish cloth away when there are holes in 
them - to mirror Lydia’s story of frugality in order to build 
rapport, foster shared values and establish group membership. 
Although Lydia seems to joke about frugality(stinginess) and 
appears to be embarrassed about it, she is implicitly 
endorsing it as a family virtue .‘Darn dish towels’ 
demonstrates the important of establishing identity. Lydia as 
the matriarch, affirms her position by endorsing a family 
virtue: frugality; and Sherry, to establish hers by gaining 
family membership. Though this family story seems to 
entertain, implicitly, there is a didactic message: frugality is an
important value in this family. By sharing family values, 
rapport is built and it further bonds the family members. 
Literary creativity is no longer strictly confined to the 
solitary genius of the Romantic literary ideals or in the 
aesthetic theory. Literary language has now extended itself to 
modern literary, linguistic and scientific expressions. 
Inadvertently, everyday language seems to provide the seeds 
for literary language. Textual artistry in literary language 
resides inherently in everyday language and language 
creativity involves the playful uses of these textual 
artistry for significant functional purposes – the 
performative art of identity construction and management of 
relationships in social interactions. Carter’s models of 
literariness further establish the theory that literariness 
is not an opposition between literary and non-literary 
language. So in language creativity, instead of seeing 
literary language as distinct from everyday language, it 
seems more appropriate to see the continuity between them: 
a cline- a matter of degree. 
(2200 words)
Bibliography: 
Maybin J., Swann J.The art of English: everyday creativity, 
The Open University, 2006
Bilingual pun. Retrieved 14 February 2009 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilingual_pun
Metonymy. Retrieved 14 February 2009
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metonymy








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