This series began with a deceptively simple question.
What happens if interpersonal meaning is no longer understood through the ontology of exchange?
For much of the history of systemic functional linguistics, the interpersonal metafunction has been described through the language of giving and demanding. Questions are said to demand information. Statements give information. Commands demand goods-and-services. Offers provide them.
This vocabulary has proven remarkably productive. It captures important regularities in discourse and provides a powerful descriptive framework for analysing interaction.
Yet it also carries a persistent assumption:
that interpersonal meaning involves the exchange of something between participants.
The purpose of this series has not been to reject the descriptive achievements of the exchange model.
It has been to ask what becomes visible when exchange ceases to function as the underlying ontology.
The answer, we have argued, is enactment.
From exchange to enactment
The central claim developed throughout this series can be stated simply:
interpersonal meaning is not the transfer of meanings between participants. It is the enactment of relational configurations.
When participants speak, they do not exchange semantic objects.
They configure relations.
These configurations establish structured possibilities for how participants may continue, respond, align, resist, commit, withdraw, accept, refuse, challenge, or comply.
Meaning is not something that moves between interlocutors.
Meaning is something that happens to the relation.
The emergence of enactment space
Once interpersonal meaning is understood as enactment, a second concept becomes necessary.
No enactment occurs in isolation.
Every enactment simultaneously opens and constrains a field of possible continuations.
Questions make some responses relevant and others problematic.
Statements position participants within structures of commitment and uptake.
Offers establish conditional possibilities for future action.
Commands reorganise the field of responsiveness and authority.
These observations led to the concept of enactment space:
the relational field of possibilities and constraints configured through interpersonal meaning.
Enactment space is not a container within which interaction occurs.
It is constituted by interaction itself.
Every speech function restructures this space in particular ways.
Reciprocity as a foundational condition
A crucial step in the argument was the recognition that no speech function can be understood from a single participant position.
Interpersonal meaning is inherently reciprocal.
Questions position both questioner and respondent.
Statements position both speaker and addressee.
Offers position both provider and potential recipient.
Commands position both authority and responder.
This reciprocity does not imply symmetry.
On the contrary, interpersonal meaning frequently operates through asymmetrical positioning.
But asymmetry itself presupposes reciprocity.
There can be no asymmetrical relation without a relation.
Speech functions as regions of enactment space
From this perspective, speech functions cease to appear as exchanges of different kinds of content.
Instead, they emerge as distinct regions within enactment space.
Questions structure answerability space.
They distribute accountability for continuation.
Statements structure responsibility space.
They distribute commitment and its consequences.
Offers structure possibility space.
They distribute conditional availability and future-oriented relational potential.
Commands structure the asymmetry frontier.
They distribute responsiveness under conditions of differential authority and entitlement.
What distinguishes these speech functions is not what they exchange, but how they configure relational possibility.
Constraint as constitutive
The series then expanded beyond speech functions themselves.
If enactment space is continually structured through interpersonal meaning, what determines which configurations become available, legitimate, or effective?
The answer was not individual intention, nor grammatical form alone.
It was constraint.
Tenor was introduced as a primary source of interpersonal constraint.
Status, role, legitimacy, and entitlement condition what kinds of enactment can successfully occur.
The same question, statement, offer, or command does not configure the same enactment space in all circumstances.
Its force depends upon the relational conditions within which it is enacted.
Constraint is therefore not external to interpersonal meaning.
It is one of the conditions of its existence.
Stabilisation and recurrence
The final step involved moving from local enactments to recurrent social configurations.
Interpersonal life is not composed of isolated events.
It consists of recurring situation types within which certain enactment-space profiles become stabilised.
Participants learn what kinds of accountability, commitment, possibility, and responsiveness are likely to occur in particular contexts.
Through repetition, these expectations sediment into recognisable patterns.
From an interpersonal perspective, register can be understood as the recurrent stabilisation of enactment-space configurations across situation types.
This stabilisation does not eliminate variability.
It makes variability socially intelligible.
A reconstructed view of interpersonal meaning
The argument of the series can now be stated in its most general form:
interpersonal meaning is the constrained structuring of enactment space.
Speech functions are not mechanisms for exchanging meanings.
They are recurrent ways of organising relational possibility.
Tenor does not merely influence interpersonal meaning.
It conditions the field within which interpersonal meaning can be enacted.
Situation types do not simply provide settings for interaction.
They stabilise characteristic configurations of enactment space across recurring social circumstances.
The result is a model in which interpersonal meaning appears not as transfer, but as relational organisation under constraint.
What this reconstruction does—and does not—claim
It is important to be clear about the scope of the argument.
Nothing in this reconstruction denies the usefulness of concepts such as giving, demanding, offering, or commanding as descriptive categories.
Nor does it deny the observable regularities that led to the exchange model in the first place.
Questions still tend to be followed by answers.
Statements still tend to be followed by uptake.
Commands still tend to be followed by compliance or refusal.
Offers still tend to be followed by acceptance or rejection.
What changes is the explanatory framework.
Exchange becomes a description of recurrent interactional patterns.
Enactment becomes the underlying relational process through which those patterns arise.
Beyond exchange
Perhaps the most significant consequence of this reconstruction is that it returns the interpersonal metafunction to its own foundational characterisation.
The interpersonal metafunction is commonly described as language functioning as action, negotiation, and enactment of social relations.
The concept of exchange captured part of that reality.
But it also risked reifying meaning into something transferable between participants.
A relational account suggests a different emphasis.
Interpersonal meaning is not primarily about moving meanings between people.
It is about configuring the relations within which people participate.
What language enacts is not an exchange.
It is a structured field of relational possibilities.
And it is within that field that social life unfolds.