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Fictions of discourseFictions of discourse

Fictions of discourse1994

O'Neill, Patrick

About this book

The fundamental principle upon which contemporary narratology is constructed is that narrative is an essentially divided endeavor, involving the story ('what really happened') and the discourse('how what happened is presented'). For traditional criticism, the primary task of narrative discourse is essentially to convey the story as transparently as possible. Patrick O'Neill investigates the extent to which narrative discourse also contains the counter-tendency not to tell the story, indeed to subvert the story it tells in foregrounding its own performance. The systemic implications of this perspective for narrative and for narrative theory are examined within the conceptual framework provided by classical French narratology. O'Neill ultimately attempts both to expand and to problematize the structural model of narrative proposed by this centrally important tradition of narrative theory. O'Neill describes narrative as functioning in terms of four interacting levels: story, narrative text, narration, and textuality. Using a range of examples from Homer to modern European fiction, he discusses traditional narrative categories such as voice, focalization, character, and setting, and reinscribes them within the contextual space of author and reader to bring out narrative's potential for ambiguity and unreliability. He also discusses the implications of translation for narrative theory.

Details

First published
1994
OL Work ID
OL1935639W

Subjects

Narration (Rhetoric)Fiction, history and criticism

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.