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Current Trends in Narrative Theory: International Perspectives April 29, 2008
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Conversational Thematics and Rhetorical Force in Narrative Fiction" Conversational Thematics and Rhetorical Force in Narrative Fiction" Anniken Greve Anniken Greve Anniken Greve Anniken Greve Department of Culture and Literature Department of Culture and Literature Faculty of Humanities Faculty of Humanities University of Tromso, Norway University of Tromso, Norway anniken.greve@hum.uit.no anniken.greve@hum.uit.no
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Unreliable Narration between Authors’ Intentions and Readers’ Cognitive Strategies Current Trends in Narrative Theory: International Perspectives Project Narrative, Ohio State University April 29, 2008 Per Krogh Hansen University of Southern Denmark
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Wayne Booth: “For lack of better terms, I have called a narrator reliable when he speaks for or acts in accordance with the norms of the work (which is to say, the implied author’s norms), unreliable when he does not. (Booth 1991 [1961]: 158f)”
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Wayne Booth: “For lack of better terms, I have called a narrator reliable when he speaks for or acts in accordance with the norms of the work (which is to say, the implied author’s norms), unreliable when he does not. (Booth 1991 [1961]: 158f)” James Phelan, on unreliable narration: “Narration in which the narrator’s reporting, reading (or interpreting), and/or regarding (or evaluating) are not in accord with the implied author’s.” (Phelan 2005: 219)
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The rhetoricians… restricts the use of the concept to fiction brings the reader’s role out of focus
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The rhetoricians… restricts the use of the concept to fiction brings the reader’s role out of focus Unreliable narration is… more flexible than the rhetoricians seem to acknowledge primarily a diegetic issue historically and culturally variable. Implied author is… in general only relevant to include if becoming visual as a narrative agent
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Four forms of unreliable narration Intranarrational unreliability Internarrational unreliability Intertextual unreliability Extratextual unreliability
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Communication in unreliable narration Implicit author Stable IronyReconstructive strategy (Sedondary narrator/ character) Rejection‘Proof-reading’ Author Character Narrator Narration Narratee Reader Approval‘Misreading’ Omitted author Unstable Irony Constructive strategy
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dreaming and narrative theory Richard Walsh two stages: the case for viewing dreams as narrative, rather than hallucinatory experience the consequences, if so, for narrative theory two approaches not pursued Dennett against dream experiences Freud’s view of the dreamwork as representational discourse
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dreams in the cognitive sciences psychological accounts v. physiological accounts: David Foulkes: operation of reflective consciousness in sleep Alan Hobson: activation-synthesis model of sleeping brain states restriction of the cognitive dimension of dreaming Peirce and the percept as sign dreams compared to memories
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representational narrative percepts dream percepts memories dreams fictive the relations between perceptions, memories and dreams
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representational narrative percepts dream percepts memories dreams fictive the relations between perceptions, memories and dreams
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representational narrative percepts dream percepts memories dreams fictive the relations between perceptions, memories and dreams
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representational narrative percepts dream percepts memories dreams fictive the relations between perceptions, memories and dreams
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representational narrative percepts dream percepts memories dreams fictive the relations between perceptions, memories and dreams
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the self in dreams tension between the “I” who experiences dream events and the “I” who produces the dream reflective consciousness in lucid dreaming narrative immersion contrasted with immersion in a simulation
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consequences for narrative theory fictionality narrativity story and discourse the narrator voice medium narrative creativity affective response
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Distributed Cognition (Cog Sci Talk) Copes with the Unsaturatable Context (Poststructuralist Talk) Ellen Spolsky Bar-Ilan University Ellen Spolsky Bar-Ilan University
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Held and Hein’s cats
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Pablo Picasso First Steps
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Dove’s nest in cactus
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Pitcher
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Picasso, Skull and Pitcher
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Othello and Desdemona
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Nimrud Lion Colossus
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Current Trends in Narrative Theory: International Perspectives April 29, 2008
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