scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

Making Sense of Narrative Text: Situation, Repetition, and Picturing in the Reading of Short Stories

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The authors explored the textual/grammatical nature of fictional narratives, critically re-examining foundational ideas about the role of lexical patterning in narrative texts, and also engaged the cognitive or psychological processes at play in literary reading.
Abstract
This book takes the following question as its starting point: What are some of the crucial things the reader must do in order to make sense of a literary narrative? The book is a study of the texture of narrative fiction, using stylistics, corpus linguistic principles (especially Hoey’s work on lexical patterning), narratological ideas, and cognitive stylistic work by Werth, Emmott, and others. Michael Toolan explores the textual/grammatical nature of fictional narratives, critically re-examining foundational ideas about the role of lexical patterning in narrative texts, and also engages the cognitive or psychological processes at play in literary reading. The study grows out of the theoretical questions that stylistic analyses of extended fictional texts raise, concerning the nature of narrative comprehension and the reader’s experience in the course of reading narratives, and particularly concerning the role of language in that comprehension and experience. The ideas of situation, repetition and picturing are all central to the book’s argument about how readers process story, and Toolan also considers the ethical and emotional involvement of the reader, developing hypotheses about the text-linguistic characteristics of the most ethically and emotionally involving portions of the stories examined. This book makes an important contribution to the study of narrative text and is in dialogue with recent work in corpus stylistics, cognitive stylistics, and literary text and texture.

read more

Citations
More filters
Book

Narratives Online: Shared Stories in Social Media

Ruth Page
TL;DR: The authors developed a new framework to address the large scale, multimodal nature of online narratives, helping researchers interpret the micro-and macro-level politics that are played out in computer-mediated communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

The year’s work in stylistics 2016:

Jane Lugea
TL;DR: Sotirova as mentioned in this paper argues that stylisticians have succeeded in creating a domain of their own, as evidenced by the publication of two discipline-defining handbooks (Burke, 2014; Stockwell and Whiteley, 2014), leading her to conclude that stylistics has matured and is indeed in good shape.

Person Deixis and Point of View in English-Arabic Fiction Translation: A Trend towards Repositioning the Narrator, Characters and Readers

TL;DR: The authors examined the shift in person deixis in two Arabic translations of Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and found that there is an increased level of enunciation of the narrator and characters that can increase the main narrator's subjectivity and the reader's ethical and emotional involvement with her.
Journal ArticleDOI

The year’s work in stylistics 2018:

TL;DR: The authors look back at work not only from the past year, but also to consider the new paths forward which stylistics seems always to be forging, a task that requires the stylistician to look backwards at work.