Towards a 'Natural' NarratologyIn this ground breaking work of synthesis, Monika Fludernik combines insights from literary theory and linguistics to provide a challenging new theory of narrative. |
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... explorers may have had to takerecourse to human fleshinorder to survive when cut off from their supplies.) Theoretical accounts onthese lines have become thestockin trade of cultural criticism and provide a convincing analysis of.
... explorers may have had to takerecourse to human fleshinorder to survive when cut off from their supplies.) Theoretical accounts onthese lines have become thestockin trade of cultural criticism and provide a convincing analysis of.
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... human. Although some of these opposites should clearly beidentified as negative foils (the artificial and the fictionalbeing prime examples),the blanketterms `civilized' or`human', onthecontrary, easilysupport an inversion of the ...
... human. Although some of these opposites should clearly beidentified as negative foils (the artificial and the fictionalbeing prime examples),the blanketterms `civilized' or`human', onthecontrary, easilysupport an inversion of the ...
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... human,the positiveevaluation tendstofall on the human end ofthescale. Conversely, thenatural vs.human dichotomy can equally operate with an evaluative inversionof these terms. Ecologists(and Romantics) tendtoevaluate the natural ...
... human,the positiveevaluation tendstofall on the human end ofthescale. Conversely, thenatural vs.human dichotomy can equally operate with an evaluative inversionof these terms. Ecologists(and Romantics) tendtoevaluate the natural ...
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... human access comingto anabrupthalt onthebridge which spansbut does noterasethe dwindling gulfbeneath. The bridge andits railingconstitute the boundarybetween the linguistic (or symbolic) realmand theostensive domainof thenatural inits ...
... human access comingto anabrupthalt onthebridge which spansbut does noterasethe dwindling gulfbeneath. The bridge andits railingconstitute the boundarybetween the linguistic (or symbolic) realmand theostensive domainof thenatural inits ...
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... human cognization. To the extent that the natural relates toaneffect of mimesis or realism,itisa constructedentity, a readingeffect;in so far asthe naturalrelieson, orreflects,basic cognitiveprocesses which relate tohuman `immundation ...
... human cognization. To the extent that the natural relates toaneffect of mimesis or realism,itisa constructedentity, a readingeffect;in so far asthe naturalrelieson, orreflects,basic cognitiveprocesses which relate tohuman `immundation ...
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Common terms and phrases
andthe anecdote Aphra Behn asthe authorial Behn Behn's bythe canbe Chapter characterization characters clauses cognitive frames cognitive parameters concept consciousness constitutes conversational deictic deixis discourse markers discussion drama écriture féminine English episode evaluative exemplum experience experientiality fiction figure first firstperson Fludernik focalization frame free indirect discourse fromthe function Genette genre heterodiegetic historical human ibid incipit instance interpretation inthe jokes language linguistic literary literature London Middle English Mimesis mimetic More's narrativization Narratology narrator narrator's natural narrative Natural Narratology natural parameters novel observer ofnarrative ofthe ofthis onthe oral Oroonoko paragraph passage pattern person perspective plot Poetics poetry postmodernist present tense pronouns prose protagonist reader reading realistic recuperation reflectorization reflectormode relation representation scene schema schemata secondperson sequences situation Stanzel story storytelling strategies structure suchas syntactic teleology teller temporal texts textual thematic thenarrative thestory thirdperson tobe tothe traditional University Press withthe writing