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Thai Poetry Reading: Phonetics and Phonology

This paper presents a pilot study on the articulatory and acoustic correlates in Thai poetry reading. The study compares the readings of a well-known female poetry reader with a model male reader for high school textbooks. The findings reveal differences in voice qualities and articulatory gestures between the two readers.

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Thai Poetry Reading: Phonetics and Phonology

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  1. A Preview of the paper to be published in Studies in Tai and Southeast Asian Linguistics. 2006, ed. by Somsong Burusphat and James G. Harris. Thai Poetry Reading: Phonetics and Phonology Apiluck Tumtavitikul and Sayweeworn Phromkhuntong

  2. Introduction A pilot study on articulatory and acoustic correlates in Thai poetry reading (Tumtavitikul 2000, อภิลักษณ์ 2540) investigated a well-known female poetry reader in reading portions of selected pieces from all five types of Thai poetry, in three different styles; normal reading, regular chanting and emotive chanting. Acoustic measurements were made on the sound recorded and laryngoscopic video-tape of the actual reading was observed. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  3. Previous Findings The amplitude contours on stressed syllables corresponding to metrically strong syllables were observed to be in a crescendo in chanting styles as opposed to a regular shape with peak amplitude during the syllable-nucleus and decreasing towards syllable-final in regular reading. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  4. The frist formant was found to have a lower average frequency in chanting styles when compared with the regular reading. In observing the larynx, the epiglottis was found to be lowered and fully covered the glottis during stressed syllables. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  5. Our Quests Are the voice qualities and the articulatory gestures, specifically, laryngeal gestures, just an individual technique ? Or are they the qualities that characterize “the model poetry reading” ? Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  6. Our studies By replicating the initial study, we study a well-known award-winning reader, a model male reader for highschool textbooks. And compare the data with those of the female reader previously studied. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  7. Our Assumptions The voice qualities are similar between the two model readers and the articulatory gestures are the same. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  8. Our Findings The first formant (F1) of the vowel [a] in our present male reader tends to be higher in chanting styles across types of poetry except for โคลง where normal reading is found to have highest F1 values . Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  9. The F1 of vowel [a] for the female reader is reported to be lower in both chanting styles when compared with normal reading in โคลง F1 in both readers for โคลงare thus, in agreement Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  10. For our male reader, theaverage fundamental frequency (Fo) is higher in both chanting styles when compared with normal reading style across all types of poetry. Between the two chanting styles, emotive chanting is found to have higher pitch . Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  11. And theFo ratios of both types of chanting styles and normal reading style show a pitch raising effect in both chanting styles between 2-7 semitones. The pitch raising is found to be greater in กลอนand โคลงthan in other types of poetry. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  12. While the shifting of Fo in the female data shows bi-direction in chanting styles, our data show a unidirectional shift in both chanting styles in all types of poetry without exception Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  13. For the female reader, it is reported that the direction of the F0 shift, either up or down from the normal pitch level, may depend on the type and content of the poetry read. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  14. As for amplitude contour, the crescendo shape was found on stressed syllables in both chanting styles in the female data. Our male reader frequents the crescendo contour in most syllables, in both chanting styles. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  15. The crescendo is more pronounced in emotive chanting than in regular chanting where some contours level off in a high plateau at the end of the syllables. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  16. The duration of prosodic constituents at all hierarchical levels measured ; คำ which is comparable to a syllable,วรรคwhich is comparable to a metrical phrase,บาท,andบทwhich is comparable to a stanza, seems to support the metrical structure of Thai poetry (Tumtavitikul 2001) where the meters are always rightheaded. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  17. The laryngoscopic video-tape reviews that in chanting styles, the epiglottis is often lowered but does not fully cover the glottis. Supraglottal mechanism may only approximate the base of the epiglottis and does not form a full closure. Such articulatory gestures are described for voiceless epiglottal fricative. (Esling 1996) Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  18. In reviewing the laryngoscopic video-tape of the female reader, the epiglottis is noticed to fully cover the glottis during stressed syllables in both chanting styles. When viewed in the posterior-anterior position of the larynx, it may possibly be that the supraglottal mechanism form a full closure against the base of the epiglottis.Such gestsures are described for voiced epiglottal fricatives (Esling 1996). Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  19. กลอน :Emotive Chanting Male reader pronouncing “Suang” in “Suang sawan” “สรวง” ในคำว่า “สรวงสวรรค์” ในการอ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ กลอนสามกรุง ( ช) Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  20. กลอน:Emotive Chanting Female reader pronouncing “Suang” in “Suang sawan” “สรวง” ในคำว่า “สรวงสวรรค์” ในการอ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ กลอนสามกรุง (ญ) Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  21. กลอน:Normal Reading กลอนบทละครอิเหนา ตอนศึกกะหมังกุหนิง “ว่าพลางทางชมคณานก” อ่านธรรมดา Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  22. กลอน:Regular Chanting กลอนบทละครอิเหนา “ว่าพลางทางชมคณานก” อ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบธรรมดา Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  23. กลอน:Emotive Chanting กลอนบทละครอิเหนา “ว่าพลางทางชมคณานก” อ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  24. toN ta? ra? tiaw ฉันท์ : Normal Reading มาณวกฉันท์ 8 “จงจรเที่ยว” อ่านแบบธรรมดา Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  25. toN ta? ra? tiaw ฉันท์ :Regular Chanting มาณวกฉันท์ 8 “จงจรเที่ยว” อ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบธรรมดา Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  26. toN ta? ra? tiaw ฉันท์ : Emotive Chanting มาณวกฉันท์ 8 1 “จงจรเที่ยว” อ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  27. ฉันท์: Emotive Chanting มาณวกฉันท์ 8 “จงจรเที่ยว” อ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  28. Conclusions The voice qualities which can be said to be quite comparable between the male reader in our present data and the female reader reported earlier (Tumtavtikul 2000) are characterized by the shifts of fundamental frequency to either higher or lower than normal reading, the prolong of syllable and phrasal duration, the raising or lowering effect of the first formant together with a crescendo in loudness on stressed syllables which may also apply to most syllables. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  29. These may possibly be the unique characteristics of chanting styles in Thai poetry reading. It is these perceivable qualities that are passed along for imitation in formal and informal instructions. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  30. However, the laryngoscopic studies seem to indicate different articulatory gestures employed by the two model readers. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  31. Mortor equivalences may be said of the methods employed by these two Thai model poetry readers. While the female reader seems to articulate with full epiglottal closure in chanting styles, the male reader seems to have a lesser degree of epiglottal folding over the larynx. The differences may be compared to the articulations of epiglottal voiced and voiceless fricatives or trills (Esling 1996). Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  32. The findings have implications for language instruction. One can be more precise as to how the verse chanting is to be read. Mere imitations from auditory input may result in different methods used by learners, which may or may not achieve the desirable end results. Moreover, the clarities on articulation and phonation help preserve the strategic verse chanting methods for later generations to appreciate fully, the aesthetics of Thai poetry reading. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  33. กลอน:Emotive Chanting กลอนสามกรุงอ่านทำนองเสนาะแบบเน้นอารมณ์ Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  34. Acknowledgement This paper is a part of the research project, The Phonetics and Phonology of Thai Verse Chanting, funded by Kasetsart University Research and Development Institute grant no. ส-ข (มน.)1.47 to Apiluck Tumtavitikul. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  35. References • Edmonson, Jerold A., Esling, JohnH., Li, Shaoni, Harris, Jimmy G. and Lama Ziwo. (2000). Laryngoscopic case studies, Minzu Yuwen, 2000, 6, pp.47-53. • Esling, John. (2002). Laryngoscopic Analysis of Tibetan Chanting Modes. ICSP 2002 Proceedings, Denver, vol. 2, pp. 1081- 1084. • Esling, John. (1996). Pharyngeal consonants and the aryepiglottic sphincter. Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 26, 65-88. • Esling, John H., Fraser, Katherine E., and Jimmy G. Harris. (2005). Glottal stop, glottalized resonants, and pharyngeals: A reinterpretation with evidence from a laryngoscopic studyof Nuuchahnulth (Nootka) Journal of Phonetics 33 (2005) 383–410 Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  36. Ladefoged, Peter. (2006). A Course in Phonetics, 5th ed. Boston: Thomson Wadsworth. • Ladefoged, Peter and Ian Maddieson. (1996). The Sounds of theWorld’s Languages. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell. • Promkhuntong, Sayweeworn. (2006). Phonetics and Phonology in Thai Verse Chanting .MA Thesis, Kasetsart University. • Tumtavitikul, Apiluck. (2001). Thai Poetry: A Metrical Analysis. Essays in Tai Linguistics, pp.29-40. M.R. Kalaya Tingsabadh and Arthur S. Abramson, eds. Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University. • Tumtavitikul, Apiluck. (2000). Interesting Acoustic and Laryngeal Correlates in Thai Poetic Reading. Humanities Journal8:27-32. (in Thai) • Tumtavitikul, Apiluck. (1996). The Mid Central Vowel []in Thai. Mon-Khmer Studies: A Journal of Southeast Asian Languages 16: 65-76. Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

  37. Tumtavitikul, Apiluck. (1994). The Metrical Structure of Thai in a Non-Linear Perspective. In South Asian Linguistic Studies in Honour of Vichin Panupong, pp. 309-324. Authur S. Abramson, ed. Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University. • อภิลักษณ์ ธรรมทวีธิกุล. 2540. สัทศาสตร์ในการศึกษาวรรณคดี ร้อยกรอง. เอกสารประกอบการสัมมนาเรื่องแนวทางวิจักษ์ วรรณคดีร้อยกรอง, หน้า 21-50. กรุงเทพฯ : ภาควิชาวรรณคดี คณะมนุษยศาสตร์ มหาวิทยาลัยเกษตรศาสตร์ Tumtavitikul and Promkhuntong 2006

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