A Systemic Stylistic Analysis On The Generic Structure Of Martin Luther King, JR.’S Speech I Have A Dream
Abstract
Language  is  a  useful  means  of  peace  and  harmony.  On  August  28,  1963, 
Martin Luther King, Jr. directed a peaceful march at Washington, D.C and delivered a 
speech known as I Have a Dream. He used abundant repetitions of phrase and clause 
in the speech. In fact, the speech was written with great care although it was delivered 
orally.  This  thesis  is  intended  to  know  how  a  language  works  in  construing  its 
meaning in text. Systemic functional  analysis is conducted in this study by applying 
Systemic Functional Linguistics proposed by Halliday and Eggins.
Library  research  is  employed  in  this  study.  The  data  used  in  this  study  are 
qualitative data applying bibliographical technique as the data collection. The data are 
five  parallel  structure  of  generic  structure  of  the  speech:  Orientation,  Complication, 
Evaluation,  Resolution,  and  Coda.  The  descriptive  method  is  used  to  describe 
lexicogrammatical patterns, semantic components, situational dimensions and context 
of culture systematically. As a result, the analyses of the excerpts show that the five 
selected  excerpts  share  the  same  Tenor:  the  unequal  (hierarchic)  power  of  Martin 
Luther King, Jr. to the civil rights supporters. Otherwise, each Field and Mode of the 
texts is different. Then, context of culture is also reflected in the analyses.