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Lesson 19

Lesson 19. Narratives: Discourse. A model of narrative structure*. Plot vs discourse Events : Propp ’s functions Roles ( Greimas ) Time management Characterization Narrators and focalization *Adapted from Simpson (2004) and Toolan (2006).

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Lesson 19

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  1. Lesson 19 Narratives: Discourse

  2. A model of narrative structure* • Plot vs discourse • Events: Propp’s functions • Roles (Greimas) • Time management • Characterization • Narrators and focalization *Adaptedfrom Simpson (2004) and Toolan (2006) These categories onften go under the rubric of ‘point of view’

  3. Time management: order, duration and frequency • Genette (1980, 1988) • Order: relation between the sequenceofevents in the story and theiractualorder or presentation in the narrative (flashback/flash forwards) • Frequencyrelation between the number of times an event occurs in the story and the number of times it is mentioned in the narrative (e.g. narrating once what happened once vs recounting more than once what happened once) • Duration: relation betweentemporalextent in the imagined world of the story and narrative pacing. The extremes are ellipsis (no textual treatment ofanevent) and descriptive pause

  4. Characterization • Personality traits and distinguishing features • Names and physical attributes (mr. Buckett • Setting (e.g. public vs private space, relevant for gender studies) • Dialogue • Dialect • speech and thought representation • How characters participate in conversation (cooperatively, aggressively…, resting mainly on Conversation analysis, pragmatics…)

  5. Characterization: names and physicalattributes • Names: Ann Grandyn, Tinker, Kathy Content (Towles, The Rules of Good Society) • Physical attributes: Mr. Buckett and his finger, Mr Tulkinghorns (Dickens, Bleak House)

  6. Characterization: speech and thoughtpresentation • For both speech and thought presentation a norm has been established, i.e. an unmarked technique corresponding to the most ‘natural way’ of rendering the original discourse event. • For spoken exchanges, the norm is identified with direct speech, as it reproduces both the content and the form of the original utterances, signaling at the same time the mediated nature of the language report. • For thought presentation Indirect Thought is considered the norm as, contrary to what the DT mode would suggest, someone else’s thought is not accessible from outside for verbatim report. DT would then be too artificial, while a mode that «only commits the writer to the content of what was thought is much more acceptable» (Leech and Short 2007: 277),

  7. Leech and Short 2007

  8. The different positioning of the norm in the two scales produces a difference in the effects created by FIS and FIT as compared to the norms. FIS is one move leftward from the norm, and thus entails a greater extent of manipulation of the original material which allows the narrator greater liberty in imposing his/her interpretation of the original message. FIT, on the other hand, is one move rightward from the norm, and thus produces the effect of placing the reader in closer contact with the character’s mind.

  9. Narrators and focalization A distinction in narratives may be made between: a. narration: the individual or position we judge to be the source and authority for whatever words are used in telling; b. focalization: the orientation we infer to be that from which what gets told is told.

  10. Focalization • In the process of telling a narrative, and the concomitant specifications of time and place, some perspective or other is always implied as the vantage point from which spatiotemporally determinate events are related. This inescapable adoption of a (limited) perspective in narrative, a viewpoint from which things are seen, felt, understood, and assessed is now (following Genette, and Bal) widely referred to as ‘focalization.’ • Focalization is least problematically a matter of visual perception (cf. the Anglo-American counterpart critical term: point of view). But in a more liberal interpretation it concerns all aspects of narrative orientation, including the cognitive, emotive, and ideological. (Toolan 2006: 470)

  11. Spatial and psychological focalization

  12. An extreme case of focalization • Shutter island trailer • Shutter island ending explained

  13. Narrators and focalization • Genette: general categorization

  14. Narrators and focalization • Genette: fine-grained distinctions concerning the narrator’s prominence • Description of settings • Identification of characters • Temporal summaries • Definition of characters • Reports of what characters did not think or say • Commentary: interpretation, judgement, generalization Claimsof full knowledge

  15. Activities: Time management For years A fewyears ago Wall street crash Fivemonths ago By June On June 11 Ellipses Whenshecame back Setting: home for status Last paragraph: MrsCopaceasfocalizer

  16. Activities: 2 • They’d had a decent sex life for many years, regular and lustily uncomplicated, on weekdays in the early morning, before the dazzling concerns of the working day penetrated the heavy bedroom curtains. At weekends in the afternoons, sometimes after tennis, social doubles in Mecklenburgh Square. Obliterating all blame for one’s partner’s fluffed shots. In fact, a deeply pleasurable love life, and beyond discussion, which was one of its joys. Not even a vocabulary for it—one reason why it pained her to hear him mention it now. • She had always loved him, was always affectionate, loyal, attentive, only last year had nursed him tenderly when he broke his leg and wrist in Méribel during a ridiculous downhill ski race against old school friends. She pleasured him, sat astride him, now she remembered, while he lay grinning amid the chalky splendor of his plaster of Paris. She did not know how to refer to such things in her own defense, and besides, these were not the grounds on which she was being attacked. It was not devotion she lacked but passion. • Then there was age. Not the full withering, not just yet, but its early promise was shining through, just as one might catch in a certain light a glimpse of the adult in a ten-year-old’s face… (Mc Ewan 2014 pp. 20-22) Fiona’s arguments are presented through Thought presentation techniques. She is the focalizer, even though the narration is in the third person. Prevalence of thought presentation backs her husband remark: “Your problem,” he said, “is that you never think you have to explain yourself. You’ve gone from me. It must have occurred to you that I’ve noticed and that I mind. Just about bearable, I suppose, if I thought it wasn’t going to last, or I knew the reason why. So….” The reader is not only told that there is a gap between them. The gap becomes ‘visible’ through discourse presentation choices

  17. Discourse presentation in McEwans’s The Children ActDiscourse presentation: Fiona

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