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NARRATOLOGY. Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?!. The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures are which are common to all acts of story-telling. . What Narratology is NOT!.
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NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory
Narratology: what is it?! • The study of narrative structures • How narratives make meaning • What the basic mechanisms and procedures are which are common to all acts of story-telling.
What Narratology is NOT! • Not the reading and interpretation of individual stories • BUT • The attempt to study the nature of ‘story’ itself, as a CONCEPT and as a CULTURAL PRACTICE.
‘STORY’ versus ‘PLOT’ • The ‘story’ is the actual sequence of events as they happen • The ‘plot’ is those events as they are edited, ordered, packaged, and presented in what we recognise as a narrative.
‘Story’ • The ‘story’, being the events as they happen, has to begin at the beginning, of course, and then move chronologically with nothing left out.
The ‘Plot’ • The ‘plot’, on the other hand, may well begin somewhere in the middle of a chain of events, and may then backtrack, with a flashback which fills us in on things that happened earlier • Plot may have elements which flash forward, hinting at events which will happen later / foreshadowing • So, the plot is a version of the story which should not be taken literally.
But remember: It is the whole packaging of the narrative which creates the overall effect. Style + viewpoint + structure + pace + characterisation + techniques etc = the narrative
A Short History of Narratology! Aristotle Vladimir Propp Gerard Genette
Good old Aristotle! • In his Poetics, Aristotle identifies CHARACTER and ACTION as the essential elements in a story • The character must be revealed through the action = through aspects of the plot
Aristotle’s Three Key Elements in a Plot • 1. The Hamartia • ‘Sin’ or ‘Fault’ • In tragic drama = tragic flaw • 2. The Anagnorisis • ‘recognition’ or ‘realisation’ • When the truth of the situation is recognised by the protagonist
Aristotle’s Three Key Elements in a Plot… • 3. The Peripeteia • A ‘turn-round’ or a ‘reversal’ of fortune • In classic tragedy this is usually a fall from high to low estate, as the hero falls from greatness • ** Categories essentially to do with moral purposes of the stories • ** However, these three elements may not suit all narratives.
Vladimir Propp (1895-1970) • Russian Formalist critic; Russian folktales • Morphology = the study of forms • His work is based on the notion that all tales are constructed by selecting items from a basic repertoire of 31 ‘functions’ (all possible actions)
Some of these functions: • One of the members of a family absents himself from home • The villain receives information about his victim • The hero leaves home • The hero is tested, interrogated, attacked etc which prepares his way for receiving either a magical agent or helper
… • Hero and villain join in direct combat • The hero is branded • The villain is defeated • The hero returns • The hero is pursued • A false hero presents unfounded claims • The hero is married and ascends the throne. • etc
Propp’s 7 ‘Spheres of Action’ • 1. The villain • 2. The Donor (provider) • 3. The Helper • 4. The Princess (a sought-for-person) and her father • 5. The Dispatcher • 6. The Hero (seeker or victim) • 7. The False Hero
Propps’ ‘Recipe’ for a Story • Take items from the ‘Functions’ and • Combine them with • ‘roles’ • from the • ‘Spheres of Action’!
Gerrard Genette • Focus: how the tale is told • The Process of telling the tale itself • 6 key areas:
1. Is the basic narrative ‘mimetic’ or ‘diegetic’? • Mimesis • = showing or dramatising; represented in a scenic way; setting, dialogue/ direct speech • = slow telling, what is done and said is ‘staged’ for the reader, creating the illusion that we are ‘seeing’ and ‘hearing’ things for ourselves.
… • Diegesis • = ‘telling’ or ‘relating’ • = more rapid or panoramic or summarising way • = gives us the essential information as efficiently as possible, without creating the illusion that the events are taking place before our eyes. • ** In reality, writers use the two modes in tandem for strategic reasons.
2. Focalisation • Viewpoint or perspective • Which point of view the story is told • External focalisation = viewpoint outside the character depicted; we are told things only external and observable; what the characters say and do • Internal focalisation = focus on what the characters think and feel
Focalisation… • ‘ Thelma stood up and called out to Mario’ = EXTERNAL FOCALISATION • ‘Thelma suddenly felt anxious that Mario was not going to see her and would walk by oblivious to where she was standing’ = INTERNAL FOCALISATION
Focalisation… • Zero Focalisation • Novelist may freely enter minds and emotions of more than one character, as if privy to the thoughts and feelings of all of them. • Characteristic of ‘traditional’ or ‘classical’ narration • Also named ‘omniscient narration’
The Unidentified Narrator • A voice; tone; an intelligent recording consciousness; • The covert, effaced, non-intrusive, non-dramatised • May not be the author’s true voice • Disembodied narrator • Authorial persona
The Identified Narrator • A distinct, named character • Has a personal history, gender, social-class position, distinct likes and dislikes etc • Have witnessed, or learned about, or even participated in the events they tell • ‘Overt’ or ‘dramatised’ or ‘intrusive narrators’
The Identified Narrator… • Either: ** Heterodiegetic Narrator = not a character in the story he/she narrates but an outsider to it eg Mr. Lockwood in Wuthering Heights ** Homodiegetic Narrator = present as a character in the story eg. Jane Eyre, Steven Messenger
The Unreliable Narrator • Narrator may be unreliable as they are: - biased; prejudiced; cynical; puzzled; misleading • May have disturbed vision of events • E.G. Steven Messenger
The Effect of the Unreliable Narrator • may be alienating and disjointed for the reader • reader as active participant • reader must decode for themselves • a refracted picture of events is portrayed
How is time handled in a story? • Narratives often contain references back and references forward so that the order of telling does not correspond to the order of happening. • ‘Analeptic’ = Flash back • ‘Proleptic’ = Flash forward
What do good writers do? • Make strategic use of both analepsis and prolepsis in a story for the beginning is seldom the best place to start. • Stories tend to begin in the middle = ‘in medias res’
Basic narrative momentum generated and readers engaged by: • starting in the middle with • analeptic material sketching out what went before and • proleptic devices hinting at what the outcome will be.
How is the story ‘packaged’? Stories are not always presented ‘straight’ or ‘linear’
‘Frame Narratives’ or ‘Primary Narratives’ • Contain within them ‘embedded’ narratives or ‘secondary narratives’ • Use of a ‘framing device’ • Also known as the ‘meta-narrative’ or ‘tales within tales’ • Eg. ‘The Turn of the Screw’, ‘Twelfth Night’ • NB: Primary narrative just means it comes first, rather than the main narrative, which usually it isn’t / secondary narrative usually the main story.
‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’? • SINGLE-ENDED • Frame situation is not returned to once the embedded narrative is complete • eg ‘The Turn of the Screw’, at the end, we don’t return to the original group telling the story around the fire.
‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’? • DOUBLE-ENDED • The frame situation is reintroduced at the end of the embedded tales • Eg ‘Heart of Darkness’, we return, briefly, to the group of listeners to whom Marlow has been telling the tale.
‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’? • INTRUSIVE • When the embedded tale is occasionally interrupted to revert to the frame situation • Eg. ‘Heart of Darkness’, Marlow interrupts his own telling and talks to the group of men • Effect can be alienating and disrupting • Conrad did this to show his distaste for omniscient narration!
Direct and tagged • ‘What’s your name?’ Mario asked her. ’It’s Thelma’, she replied.
Direct and Untagged ‘What’s your name?’ ‘Thelma’
Indirect Speech • He asked her what her name was, and she told him it was Thelma. • Effect: formal distancing between reader and events.
Free Indirect Speech • What was her name? It was Thelma • Effect: Suits an internally focalised narrative as it seems natural and ‘glides’. What was her name? It was Thelma. Thelma was it? Not the kind of name to launch a thousand ships. More of a suburban, lace-curtain sort of name, really.
Narratology as a branch of STRUCTURALISM
STRUCTURALISM • Focus on structure, symbol, design • Parallels, echoes, reflections, patterns and contrasts • Narrative becomes highly schematised
Parallels Echoes Reflections / Repetitions in Contrasts Patterns Plot Structure Character / Motive Situation / Circumstance Language / Imagery We look for the factors on the left and expect to find them in the parts of the tale listed on the right.
The thesis of Structuralism: • That narrative structures are founded upon underlying paired opposites, or dyads • These contrasts are the skeletal structure on which all narratives are fleshed out.
Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure • The tale may have a binary structure (a structure of paired opposites) made up of two contrasting halves • ‘Strange Objects’- What are the two structural halves? What is the ‘framing narrative’? = Steven Messenger’s first-person diary entries and the ‘contrasting half’ is the other material: Wouter Loos’ journal entries; police reports; advertisements; letters etc
Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure • Marked difference in narrative pace between the narrative halves: • Messenger’s narrative: moves with increasingly disjointed rapidity, reflecting his fractured sense of self; psychosis • ‘Other’ narrative half: ordered text types; range of perspectives; methodical
Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure • Consider how each narrative half effects the other; what is the relationship between the two; distribution of power
Binary Opposition within the character of Steven Messenger • Consider contrasts and parallels between SM’s ‘two halves’ / his alter-ego / the ‘Other’