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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... such as we encounter it indiscourse, has always already been reshaped symbolically and is therefore an interpretative effect,a discourse rather thanareferent beyond the proverbial abyssof language andmind. Whatever we encounter as ...
... such as we encounter it indiscourse, has always already been reshaped symbolically and is therefore an interpretative effect,a discourse rather thanareferent beyond the proverbial abyssof language andmind. Whatever we encounter as ...
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... sucha frame, andsince such frames are determined bycultural, i.e. societaland ideological, circumstances, theycannot ... such as oral syntax (Halfordand Pilch 1990;Chafe 1994)which have decisively puttorestany previous notionsof ...
... sucha frame, andsince such frames are determined bycultural, i.e. societaland ideological, circumstances, theycannot ... such as oral syntax (Halfordand Pilch 1990;Chafe 1994)which have decisively puttorestany previous notionsof ...
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... such as we experience them in practice in daily life.This experienceincludes also a recognitionof the interactionbetween shortterm andlongterm goals as regulating one's choices in relation to immediate action, and it coversthe recurring ...
... such as we experience them in practice in daily life.This experienceincludes also a recognitionof the interactionbetween shortterm andlongterm goals as regulating one's choices in relation to immediate action, and it coversthe recurring ...
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... such as justice, mercy, wisdom, truthfulness and the like,and relations to subjects are conceived of in similar terms (loyalty, disloyalty, flattery, fealty). Such personal relationships were not mererhetoric aslongas the feudal ...
... such as justice, mercy, wisdom, truthfulness and the like,and relations to subjects are conceived of in similar terms (loyalty, disloyalty, flattery, fealty). Such personal relationships were not mererhetoric aslongas the feudal ...
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... suchas secondperson fiction (treatedin Chapter6).Narrativization can therefore ultimatelyfeed into diachronic change, inthe incorporation of new options intothe realm of familiar genres or discourse types. These newly available frames ...
... suchas secondperson fiction (treatedin Chapter6).Narrativization can therefore ultimatelyfeed into diachronic change, inthe incorporation of new options intothe realm of familiar genres or discourse types. These newly available frames ...
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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