By default, the deictic center, the origo, is occupied by the speaker of an utterance. There are two ways that the origo can shift to somebody else:
- By a conversational turn, an interlocutor becomes the new speaker.
- The speaker transfers the origo to one of his referents.
In either case, deixis is shifted, i.e. the mapping of a deictic expression onto a referent or referential sphere changes. In case 1, the same person who was referred to by you is now referred to by I; and likewise for a set of other deictic expressions. In case 1, a new speech situation results, with the same deictic rules obtaining as before. Here only case 2, specifically the deictic shift in reported speech, is at stake.
To report a certain utterance made by Linda, I can say either or .
. | Linda said: ‘I am hungry.’ |
. | Linda said that she was hungry. |
represents direct speech; represents indirect speech (q.v.). In direct speech, I cede the origo to somebody who was, up to then, only one of my referents, so that I in no longer refers to me, but to Linda. In indirect speech, I remain the origo; Linda keeps being referred to by the third person pronoun she. In either case, deixis shifts, although in the opposite sense:
- In direct speech, deixis shifts in the sense mentioned initially: I accept the other speaker's perspective, her utterance is reported such as she made it, so she generates a speech situation of her own, she dominates its deixis, and this determines the reference of deictic expressions in the reported utterance. ‘Deixis shifts’ here means: the same deictic expressions have one set of referents in the reporting utterance and a distinct set of referents in the reported utterance. The deictic shift in direct speech is a change in the reference of deictic expressions.
Both of these operations may legitimately be called ‘deictic shift’. As a consequence, the term ‘deictic shift in reported speech’ is ambiguous. For precision, ‘deictic shift in direct speech’ and ‘deictic shift in indirect speech’ are available.