Monika Fludernik ; translated from the German by Patricia Ha usler-Greenfield and Monika Fludernik
.PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC
Place of Publication, Distribution, etc.
London New York
Name of Publisher, Distributor, etc.
Routledge
Date of Publication, Distribution, etc.
2009
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
x, 190 p. ill. 26 cm
UNIFORM TITLE
General Material Designation
Einfu hrung in die Erza hltheorieEnglish
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Entry Element
Narration )Rhetoric(
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CLASSIFICATION
Class number
PN
Book number
212
Classification Record Number
.
F5613
2009
PERSONAL NAME - PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITY
Entry Element
Fludernik, Monika
PERSONAL NAME - ALTERNATIVE RESPONSIBILITY
Entry Element
Includes bibliographical references )p. ]166[-182( and indexes.
Entry Element
Narrative and narrating -- The theory of narrative -- Text and authorship : The author -- The structure of narrative : Text-internal narrative structures ; Narrative and plot ; The narrator: person ; Time ; Presentational modes ; Focalization, perspective, point of view -- The surface of narrative Space/time -- Fictional characters: how characters are introduced ; Story and contouring ; Oral storytelling and the episodic model ; Episodic structure ; The creative use of pronouns in texts ; Experiments with tense in narratives -- Realism, illusionism and metafiction : Narrative realism ; Roland Barthes ; The authenticity of the narrative voice ; Fictionality ; Metafiction and metanarration -- Language, the representation of speech and the stylistics of narrative : Language ; Representing speech ; Language and style ; Stylistic variation ; Metaphor and metonymy -- Thoughts, feelings and the unconscious -- Narrative typologies : Franz Karl Stanzel's theory of narrative ; Ge rard Genette's theory of narrative ; Recent theories of narrative -- Diachronic approaches to narrative : From speech to writing ; The development of new narrative modes and their cognitive bases -- Narratological firsts ; New media ; Changing functions and theoretical readjustments ; Open research questions -- Practical applications : Great expectations and Mister Pip: childhood selves ; Authorial narrative: the perspective form above ; Reading people's minds -- Guidelines for budding narratologists : How to write about narratological issues ; Some do's and don't's: how to avoid narratologically infelicitous phrases