The critique of the common theory of narrative fiction in narratology: Pursuing difference

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-34
Author(s):  
Tommy Sandberg

AbstractThis article aims to characterize a commonly misunderstood and neglected critique of narratology and insists that the critique could advance the narratological discussions if taken more seriously. I describe the notions of three individual critics and one group of critics and their suggested alternatives to what they hold to be the dominating description of narrative fiction in narratology. In turn, I take up Sylvie Patron’s linguistic approach, Lars-Åke Skalin’s aesthetic approach, and Richard Walsh’s pragmatic approach, as well as unnatural narratology (which is less radical), and suggest that they have a Difference approach to narrative fiction. The critique is contrasted with what I refer to as a Sameness approach, guiding the dominating description of narrative fiction in narratology. The Sameness approach relates novels and short stories to a notion of a default mode of “narrative” which is based on situated speech about something that has happened. This is, according to the critics, a mistake. The main thrust of the critics, although with some exceptions, is instead that narrative fiction needs to be approached as sui generis in order to be described effectively. Yet how this should be done is still open for debate.

2017 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shang Biwu

AbstractMany of Hassan Blasim’s short stories fall into a broad category of unnatural narrative. In line with the most recent scholarship on unnatural narratology, this article first discusses the unnatural worldmaking strategies adopted by Blasim that include dead narrators, conflicting events, and ontological metalepsis. Second, it analyzes a set of unnatural acts closely related to the characters’ death and their consequential corporeal impairments. Third, it examines the mentality of Blasim’s characters by focusing on a particular type of unnatural mind – the paranoid mind, which in radical cases involves two conflicting minds simultaneously emerging in one character. By resorting to unnatural narratives, Blasim makes his short stories anti-mimetically impossible but nightmarishly real, which not only generates effects of defamiliarity and horror but also forces us to ponder over what is now happening in the seemingly remote parts of the world and to raise our common concerns for human suffering.


1999 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-48
Author(s):  
Louise Tee

ADVERSE possession and registered land are unlikely bedfellows–the one originating in the common law idea that a freehold estate results from possession and the other premised upon registration validating title. Indeed, when registration of title was introduced into England and Wales in the nineteenth century, acquisition of title to registered land by adverse possession was prohibited–see section 21 of the Land Transfer Act 1875. However, a more pragmatic approach then ensued, and the Land Registration Act 1925, s. 75, expansively provided that the Limitation Acts should apply to registered land in the same manner and to the same extent as those Acts applied to unregistered land. But technically, of course, this was impossible, and the section detailed a special trust mechanism for registered land alone. Section 75 thus clearly illustrates the inherent difficulties in trying to retain the substantive law of unregistered land within a registered context. Tensions are inevitable, because of the very different conceptual bases of the two systems. In Central London Commercial Estates Ltd. v. Kato Kagaku Ltd., The Times, 27 July 1998, Sedley J. was directly faced with such tension, as he strove to determine the effect of section 75.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward McDonald

Abstract Drawing on a social semiotic framework, this paper sets out to examine two different semiotic systems whose default mode of expression is the human voice – language and music. Through comparing how each system differentially employs the human voice, we can identify both their commonalities and differences, and go some way to treating both equally within de Saussure’s envisaged broader field of “semiology”, avoiding the common trap of “linguistic imperialism”, i.e. taking language as the model for all semiotic systems. Starting by conceptualising the key relationship between the text, or unified instance of meaning-making, and the social contexts in which it functions, the paper then examines the material affordances utilised by each system, and the kinds of social meanings they express.


2014 ◽  
Vol 132 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Straub

Abstract Recent research on melodrama has stressed its versatility and ubiquity by approaching it as a mode of expression rather than a theatrical genre. A variety of contexts in which melodrama is at work have been explored, but only little scholarly attention has been paid to the relationship between melodrama and novels, short stories and novellas. This article proposes a typology of melodrama in narrative prose fiction, examining four different categories: Melodrama and Sentimentalism, Depiction of Melodramatic Performances in Narrative Prose Fiction, Theatrical Antics and Aesthetics in Narrative Prose Fiction and Meta-Melodrama. Its aim is to clarify the ways in which melodrama, ever since its early days on the stages of late eighteenth-century Europe, has interacted with fictional prose narratives, thereby shaping the literary imagination in the Anglophone world.


Author(s):  
Jinan Al-Tamimi

ملخص البحث:  تتناول هذه الدراسة ضمن الدراسات اللسانية التي تُعنى بتحليل الخطاب الشفاهي والبحث في خصائصه، بالاستعانة بأدوات التداولية لتأويل العملية التبليغية. وهدف البحث الأساسي هو البحث عن المعنى باستخدام الوسائل الممكنة كافة في التحليل الدلالي والتداولي، وتهدف الدراسة إلى إبراز العلل الفكرية أو العنصرية ضد المرأة في ضوء مقاربات تطبيقية لبعض الأمثال الشعبية المتداولة في المجتمع العربي وتحديداً في شبه الجزيرة العربية، والتي اعتمدت في أكثرها على ما جمعه عبد الكريم الجهيمان في كتابه الأمثال في جزيرة العرب، وعلى بعض الأمثال الشفوية التي جمعتُها من كلامنا المتداول شفهياً أو كتابياً. وتوصلت الدراسة إلى أن تفاوت صيغة المثل من عبارات تحتوي على صيغة الأمر والنهي والعبارات الشرطية والنفي المركب، وأن التصور التداولي يختلف عن المعنى الدلالي الذي ارتبط بحكاية إنتاج المثل لأول مرة، وأن الأمثال الشعبية قد تُستخدم في سياق مؤيد لها وقد تُساق للاعتراض عل محتواها والسخرية منها؛ لأنها تناقض المبادئ الحضارية والإنسانية.   الكلمات المفتاحية: المثل الشعبي- الخصائص - الدلالة- التداولية- الصورة الذهنية.   Abstract: This study is within the framework of linguistics that attempts to analyze spoken discourse and discuss its characteristics through pragmatic tools to interpret the process of communication. The study primarily aims to seek the meaning through semantic and pragmatic analysis to uncover negative or chauvinistic implications about women in some similes taken from the spoken folklore discourse in the Arab society in particular in the Arabian Peninsula. The samples were taken primarily from the collection of Dr. ’Abdel Karīm al-Jumaiḥan entitled al-Amthal fī Jazīrati al-’Arab (Proverbs in the Arabian Peninsula). This is in addition to what the researcher collected from the common spoken or written proverbs in the Arab folklore. The study concluded that proverb had various expressions that consist of imperative, prohibitive, conditional and compound negative construction. Semantic meaning is different from pragmatic function that is related to the background story of the proverb used to support; object of ridicule the context if it is violates the human civilizational norms. Keywords: Folklore proverbs- characteristics- Semantic- Pragmatic-Mental images.   Abstrak: Kajian ini dijalankan dalam kerangka pengkajian linguistik yang cuba menganalisa wacana pertuturan serta ciri-cirinya melalui instrument pragmatik bertujuan untuk menginteprasi proses komunikasi. Kajian ini secara amnya cuba untuk meninjau aspek makna melalui analisa pragmatik dan semantic untuk menyingkap implikasi negatif atau cauvinistik tentang imej wanita  di dalam beberapa bidalan yang diambil daripada wacana pertuturan rakyat di dalam masyarakat Arab terutamanya di Semenanjung Tanah Arab. Sampel kajian diambil kebanyakannya daripada koleksi yang dikumpulkan oleh Dr. ‘Abdel Karīm al-Jumaiḥan yang diperoleh daripada buku beliau bertajuk ‘Al-amthal fī Jazīrati al-‘Arab. (Kata bidalan di Semenanjung Tanah Arab) Ini adalah disamping beberapa koleksi bidalan tambahan yang dikutip daripada wacana bertulis dan pertuturan di dalam tradisi rakyat Arab. Kajian ini merumuskan yang kata bidalan mempunyai bentuk pernyataan yang mengandungi makna suruhan, larangan, syarat dan bentuk penafian. Makna semantik didapati berbeza daripada fungsi pragmatik yang terkait dengan latar cerita kata bidalan yang berkenaan yang bertujuan samada untuk menyokong cerita tersebut, menyanggah atau menyindir konteks penceritaan itu sekiranya ia menyimpang daripada norma ketamadunan manusia.   Kata kunci: Kata bidalan rakyat- ciri-ciri – semantik – pragmatic – bayangan mental.


Author(s):  
V. B. Tharakeshwar

Modernism, known in Kannada as ‘Navya’, emerged as a literary movement in the 1950s. This period saw writers deliberately moving away from the Romanticism of the Navodaya period, which is considered an age of literary renaissance shaped by complex interaction with colonialism and the West. In contrast to Navodaya, which reflected nationalist sentiments, the Navya period emerged in the context of the formation of the Indian nation-state. The newly formed Indian nation-state aroused considerable expectations, and their betrayal led to anti-Congress (the ruling party), anti-Jawaharlal Nehru (the first Prime Minister of India) sentiments among the intellectuals and the literati. It was a post-Gandhi era of disappointment and disillusionment in literature. Navya was also partly in response to the leftist progressive movement, called Pragatisheela in Kannada, which arose in 1940s and continued in the 1950s. Pragatisheela literature, prominent in short stories and novels, focused on social issues such as poverty, the importance of context in shaping one’s personality, and the plight of the common man, and it employed realistic narration. Modernist poetry was shaped by its opposition to Navodaya writing, while modernist short stories and novels emerged as a reaction to Pragatisheela literature.


Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. V325-V343 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujiang Xie ◽  
Dirk Gajewski

The knowledge of 3D wavefront attributes allows many important applications, such as stacking, 5D interpolation, 3D diffraction separation and imaging, and 3D wavefront tomography, just to name a few. For the determination of wavefront attributes, we use the common-reflection-surface (CRS) operator. We adopt a simultaneous search for the determination of wavefront attributes and combine it with conflicting dip processing. For the simultaneous search, we compare three heuristic global optimization algorithms such as particle swarm optimization (PSO), genetic algorithm (GA), and differential evolution (DE). For conflicting dip processing, a dip angle decomposition method for the probed sample is introduced and the simultaneous search is independently performed in specified dip ranges to individually obtain attributes and semblance for each range. Results for the laterally heterogeneous 3D SEG C3WA data indicate that DE has superior performance to determine the 3D wavefront attributes when compared with PSO, GA, and the conventional pragmatic approach because a higher semblance and an improved set of wavefront attributes are achieved. A comparison of the data-driven wavefront attributes obtained from the DE with the model-driven wavefront attributes computed by kinematic and dynamic ray tracing reveals the validity of the data-driven wavefront attributes. Combining the simultaneous search with conflicting dip processing for the 3D CRS stack further improved reflected energy and diffraction details when compared with results without simultaneous search and/or conflicting dip processing.


2004 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zacharias Kotzé

This article reviews several approaches to the study of anger in the Old Testament. It focuses on the use of methodology in these trends with specific reference to the common neglect of Classical Hebrew terminology and expressions relating to the emotion of anger. Such styles lead to an impoverished understanding of the ideal cognitive model of anger as reflected in Classical Hebrew. By contrast, the few recent cognitive linguistic studies on the same subject prove to be far more successful in giving a detailed account of the ancient Israelite conceptualisation of this emotion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 106 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-113
Author(s):  
Matthias Meiler

The article deals with the use of the platform Twitter for internal scholarly communication from the perspective of contrastive linguistics of academic language. Since such a genuinely linguis­tic perspective on the scholarly use of Twitter is largely new, it is merely possible to take stock of the interdisciplinary dicussion of the phenomenon on the one hand and to methodologi­cally/ methodically explore a linguistic approach to it on the other. The perspective presented here combines a genuinely pragmatic approach to the analysis of scholarly language with media linguistic principles and terms that make it possible to compare recent and historical develop­ments in scientific communication.


The research paper aims at reframing the diasporic nuances such asalienation due to displacement, and assimilation as portrayed in JhumpaLahiri’sInterpreter of Maladies. This literary work discusses various changes and features of immigrants. The study of Diaspora, generally, describes the nature of memory, exile, nostalgia, alienation, and crises of identity. It surveys the two points; Assimilation and Alienation which are prominently raised in Diaspora writing. The present paper states about the collocation or nearness of past and present. The Cultural frames of references are implicated in traditions, rituals and specially the characters. They put an effort to make the cultures and traditions alive through the works. It also highlights the places; homeland as well as established country. The present study focuses on the widespread characteristics of Diaspora like discrimination, nostalgia, survival, cultural and traditional changes and identity. The study also touches upon novels and short stories that go along with the common traits or features of diasporic literature.


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