Abstract
In this paper, I will first try to provide a new argument in favour of the
contextualist position on the semantics/pragmatics divide. I will argue
that many puns, notably multi-stable ones, cannot be dealt with in the
non-contextualist way, i.e., as displaying a phenomenon that effectively
involves wide context, the concrete situation of discourse, yet only in a
pre-, or at least inter-, semantic sense. For, insofar as they involve
ambiguous utterances rather than ambiguous sentences, these puns
show that the wide context affecting them has a semantic role: it
provides many truth-conditions for a single utterance. Moreover, I will
try to show that the contextualist can provide a unitary account of the
general phenomenon of puns. On the one hand, this account explains
multi-stable puns as well as those puns the non-contextualist claims to
deal with successfully, i.e., the ones involving a speaker-induced
removal of a well-grounded misunderstanding. On the other hand, it
also explains zeugmatic puns, i.e., those involving an ‘impossible’
meaning.