Guide To Literary Text Analysis
Guide To Literary Text Analysis
Guide To Literary Text Analysis
Liubovi HOMULO
Chişinău 2009
3
CZU 811.111’42(075.8)
H 76
Homulo, Liubovi
Guide to literary text analysis : [pentru uzul studenţilor]/ Liubovi
Homulo ; Univ. Liberă Intern. din Moldova, Fac. of Foreign Languages and
Communication Science, Chair of Germanic Philology. – Ch.: ULIM, 2009.
– 43 p.
Bibliogr.: p. 43 (19 tit.). – 50 ex.
ISBN 978-9975-934-82-4
811.111’42(075.8)
H 76
ISBN 978-9975-934-82-4 © Homulo Liubovi
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CONTENTS
Preface …………………………………………………………… … 4
Evaluating a story ………………………………………………….. 5
Algorithm for literary text analysis ……………………………….. 11
Hints for making analysis ………………………………………….. 14
Words and expressions helpful for text analysis …………………. 15
Notes on style ……………………………………………………….. 16
The list of stylistic devices and expressive means according to
I.R. Galperin ………………………………………………………... 17
Lexical expressive means and stylistic devices ……………………... 17
Syntactical expressive means and stylistic devices ………………….. 20
Phonetic expressive means and stylistic devices ……………………. 28
Extension ……………………………………………………………. 30
Theme………………………………………………………………… 30
Tone …………………………………………………………………. 30
Setting ……………………………………………………………….. 31
Atmosphere ………………………………………………………….. 31
Intertextuality ………………………………………………………... 31
Plot …………………………………………………………………... 32
Freytag’s pyramid …………………………………………………… 32
Narrative and narrator ……………………………………………….. 34
Point of view ………………………………………………………… 35
Image ………………………………………………………………… 36
Symbol ………………………………………………………………. 36
Chronology of events in the story …………………………………… 36
Time analysis ………………………………………………………... 37
Narrative mode ………………………………………………………. 37
Focalization ………………………………………………………….. 38
Summary …………………………………………………………….. 39
Connectors and sequence markers …………………………………... 41
Sources ……………………………………………………………… 43
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PREFACE
6
EVALUATING A STORY
7
illustrate, fairy tales are usually tightly plotted following the pattern A does
X because B has done (or is) Y. -- The Queen is jealous because Snow-
White has become more beautiful than she is. So she orders a huntsman to
kill her. Nevertheless, the huntsman does not do it because he takes pity on
Snow-White (because she's so beautiful). [10, p. 23]
Sometimes a plot follows the chronological order of events. At other
times there are jumps back and forth in time (flashbacks and
foreshadowing).
The four structural components of the plot are exposition, complication,
climax and denouement.
Exposition contains a short presentation of time, place, characters and
background of the story. Exposition analysis deals with the questions of
how, when, and to what extent the recipient is informed about the story’s
background and its existents. Although the exposition is usually expected as
an isolated block situated at the beginning of a play (this is the place it has
in Freytag's pyramid), some scholars suggest that one should distinguish a
type of 'isolated exposition in the initial position' from an 'integrated
exposition', which, distributed in "a number of smaller units" across the
whole text, successively and cumulatively informs the recipient about the
play's background (time, setting, etc.).
Complication is a separate incident helping to unfold the action, and
might involve thoughts and feelings as well. Climax is a decisive moment
on which the fate of the characters and the final action depend.
Denouement means 'the untying of a knit' which is precisely what happens
in this phase. It is the final resolution of the plot(s), leading to the play's
'closure'. Not all stories have a denouement, some stories end right after the
climax. Closure is the type of conclusion that ends a text. Tightly plotted
texts often have a 'recognition scene' (in which the protagonist finally
recognizes the true state of affairs), and in the course of the dénouement the
conflict is usually resolved by marriage, death, or some other aesthetically
or morally satisfactory outcome. Many modern stories and plays lack
closure, however, are open-ended, simply stop, or conclude enigmatically
and ambiguously.
'Freytag's pyramid' is a well-known time-line model which attempts to
capture the general structure of a classical five-act tragedy (as established
by Horace 50 BC). Freytag [6, p.35; 11, p. 6].
8
Note: For the original Freytag's pyramid see p. 33.
Abrams [2], cited by Jahn Manfred [10, p.24], illustrates Freytag's
pyramid using Shakespeare's Hamlet as an example: "the rising action (or
what Aristotle called the complication) begins with the ghost telling Hamlet
of his murder, and continues with the conflict between Hamlet and
Claudius, in which Hamlet, despite setbacks, succeeds in controlling the
course of events. The highest point of the rising action, the climax, comes
with the proof to Hamlet of the king's guilt by the device of the play within
the play, Act II, scene II. The falling action begins with the 'turning point,'
or Hamlets failure to kill the king while he is at prayer. From now on the
antagonist, Claudius, for the most part controls the action until the tragic
catastrophe, at which point occurs the death of the hero" [2, p. 72]. Holman
[9, p. 174] adds: "The latter part of the falling action is sometimes marked
by an event which delays the catastrophe and seems to offer a way of
escape for the hero (the apparent reconciliation of Hamlet and Laertes). This
is called the 'moment of final suspense' and aids in maintaining interest."
Elements of a work of fiction. Any work of fiction consists of relatively
independent elements - narration, description, dialogue, interior monologue,
etc. Narration is dynamic, it gives a continuous account of events, while
description is static, and it is a verbal portrait of an object, person or scene.
It may be detailed and direct or impressionistic, giving few but striking
details. Through the dialogue the characters are better portrayed, it also
brings the action nearer to the reader, makes it seem swifter and more in-
tense. Interior monologue renders the thoughts and feelings of a character.
The interrelation between different components of a literary text is called
composition.
9
A short story is more than just a sequence of happenings. Its setting may
be no less important than the events themselves. The term setting is
generally taken to include not only the geographical place, in which the
events in a story happen, but also a historical era, the daily lives and
customs of the characters. Such details as the time of the year, certain parts
of the landscape, the weather, colours, sounds or other seemingly trivial
details may be of great importance. The setting can have various functions
in a given story: 1) it can provide a realistic background, 2) it can evoke the
necessary atmosphere, 3) it can help describe the characters indirectly [1,
p.296].
Characters and characterization. Characterization analysis investigates
the ways and means of creating the personality traits of fictional
characters. The basic analytical question is, Who (subject)
characterizes whom (object) as being what (as having which traits
or properties).
An explicit characterization is a verbal statement that ostensibly
attributes (i.e., is both meant to and understood to attribute) a trait or
property to a character who may be either the speaker him- or herself
(autocharacterization), or some other character (alterocharacterization). An
explicit characterization is usually based on a descriptive statement
(particularly, a sentence using be or have as its main verb) that identifies,
categorizes, individualizes, and evaluates a person. Characterizing
judgments can refer to external, internal, or habitual traits ("John has blue
eyes, is a good-hearted fellow, and smokes a pipe"). Note that an explicit
characterization is mainly defined as being one that is meant and understood
to be a verbal characterization -- however, the characterizing statement
itself can clearly be quite vague, allusive, or elliptical (as in "he is not a
person you'd want to associate with").
An implicit characterization is an autocharacterization (usually
unintentional) in which somebody's physical appearance or behaviour is
indicative of a characteristic trait. X characterizes him- or herself by
behaving or speaking in a certain manner. Nonverbal behaviour (what a
character does) may characterize a person as, for instance, a homosexual, a
fine football player, or a coward. Characters are also implicitly
characterized by their dress, their physical appearance (e.g., a hunchback)
and their chosen environment (e.g., their rooms, their pet dogs, their cars).
Verbal behaviour (the way a character speaks, or what a character says in a
certain situation) may characterize a person as, for instance, having a certain
educational background (jargon, slang, dialect), as belonging to a certain
class or group of people (sociolect), or as being truthful, evasive, ill-
mannered, etc.
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At crucial moments, an implicit characterization can significantly clash
with an explicit characterization. In fact, all explicit
characterizations are always also implicit autocharacterizations.
(Why? Because the way you characterize somebody -- other people
as well as yourself -- always also characterizes yourself.)
How much a character knows about himself/herself or about others is an
important aspect of his or her characterization. One can be well informed or
badly informed, know everything or nothing, and be fully aware of
something or partially aware of something. There is a saying "knowledge is
power"; to know nothing about what one is expected to know is to be
ignorant (an 'ignoramus'). There is also the additional question whether
one's lack of knowledge can be blamed on oneself or on others. Rather than
assess a person's knowledge in absolute terms, one can also compare it to
the level of knowledge of others, specifically comparing characters vs.
characters, and characters vs. audience. Comparatively speaking, then, there
can be congruent awareness or discrepant awareness. Discrepant
awareness, in particular, results from a party's superior or inferior
awareness.
Most writers of the short story attempt to create characters that strike us,
not as stereotypes, but as unique individuals [1, p.296]. Characters are
called round if they are complex and develop or change in the course of the
story. Flat characters are one-sided, constructed round a single trait. If two
characters have distinctly opposing features, one serves as a foil to the
other, and the contrast between them becomes more apparent. Round
characters have different functions in the conflict of the story. The conflict
may be external, i.e. between human beings or between man and the
environment (individual against nature, individual against the established
order (values in the society). The internal conflict takes place in the mind,
here the character is torn between opposing features of his/her personality.
The two parties in the conflict are called the protagonist and the
antagonist. When the author himself/herself describes the character, or
makes another do it, it is direct characterization. When the author shows
the character in action, and lets the reader judge, it is indirect
characterization.
The theme of a story is whatever general idea or insight the entire story
reveals. In some stories the theme is unmistakable, in others, it is not so
obvious. That is, it need not be a moral or a message; it may be what the
happenings add up to, what the story is about. Frequently writers are
interested in suggesting rather than explaining the theme of a story, leaving
it to the reader to infer, or deduce, the hidden meaning. They have a variety
of means at their disposal, such as parallelism, contrast, repetition, artistic
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details, symbols, etc. to develop the theme out of the story. Indeed, plot,
focus and voice, and character are not so much interrelated, as they are
fused and inseparable.
There are few absolute rights or wrongs when it comes to analyzing a
short story. Nevertheless, the underlying premise of our approach is that
students must read each story several times at home with certain questions
in mind (see hints for making analysis, p. 14).
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ALGORITHM FOR LITERARY TEXT ANALYSIS
II. Summary of the text. Division of the text into logically complete parts,
defining the key sentences to each part and titles if necessary.
III. Composition of the story. The information carried by the title and its
role. The components of the text the title is related to.
The beginning and the end of the text. Paragraphs belonging to exposition,
story itself, climax, denouement, plot.
13
emotions), message, characters of the text (protagonist, antagonist;
major/minor, flat/round, dynamic/static), problems, conflicts (major, minor,
interior, exterior), events, facts, significant details, associations, feelings,
thoughts evoked by the text.
14
VIII. Evaluation and personal response.
a). The writer’s individual style in comparison with others’.
b). Evaluation of the text from the point of view of form and content.
c). Reader’s attitude to the ideas expressed in the text. The contribution
of the writer to the reader’s understanding of the theme/field. The reader’s
identification with the writer’s arguments.
15
HINTS FOR MAKING ANALYSIS
16
WORDS AND EXPRESSIONS HELPFUL FOR TEXT ANALYSIS
17
NOTES ON STYLE
18
THE LIST OF STYLIST DEVICES AND EXPRESSIVE MEANS
ACCORDING TO I. R. GALPERIN
19
“…curly-headed good-for-nothing,
And mischief-making monkey from his birth.” (G. Byron)
20
Euphemism – a word or phrase used to replace an unpleasant word or
expression by a conventionally more acceptable one. [7, p.173] In other
words, euphemisms are synonyms which aim at producing a deliberately
mild effect:
To pass away, to be no more, to depart, to join the majority, to be gone
and more facetious ones: to kick in the bucket, to give up the ghost, to go
west.
“They think we have come by this horse in some dishonest manner.”
(have stolen it).
21
Most modern preachers say the same, or show it
By their examples of the Christianity…” (G. Byron)
22
“Once upon a midnight dreary…” (E.A. Poe)
3. a) The predicative is placed before the subject, as in
“A good generous prayer it was.” (Mark Twain)
b) The predicative stands before the link-verb and both are placed
before the subject, as in
“Rude am I in my speech…” (W. Shakespeare)
4. The adverbial modifier is placed at the beginning of the sentence, as
in:
“Eagerly I wished the morrow” (E.A. Poe)
5. Both modifier and predicate stand before the subject, as in:
“In went Mr. Pickwick” (Ch. Dickens)
23
Chiasmus is sometimes achieved by a sudden change from the active
to passive voice or vice versa. E.g.:
“The register of his burial was signed by the clergyman, the clerk, the
undertaker and the chief mourner. Scrooge signed it.” (Ch. Dickens)
24
There is a variety of repetition which is called root-repetition, where it
is not the same words that are repeated but the same root, as in:
“To live again in the youth of the young.” (J. Galsworthy)
There are two terms frequently used to show the negative attitude of
the critic to all kinds of synonymic repetitions. These are pleonasm – the
use of more words in a sentence than are necessary to express the
meaning; redundancy of expression, and tautology - the repetition of the
same statement; the repetition of the same word or phrase or of the same
idea or statement in other words; usually as a fault of style. E.g.:
“It was a clear starry night, and not a cloud was to be seen.”
“He was the only survivor; no one else was saved.” [7, p.215]
“That valley of flowers, that cottage in the birch glade, that buttercup
field with the little river and a kingfisher – if only the train would stop! ”
(E. Farjeon)
25
Climax (Gradation) – arrangement of sentences (or homogeneous parts
of one sentence) which secures a gradual increase in significance,
importance or emotional tension in the utterance, as in:
“Nobody ever stopped him in the street to say, with gladsome looks,
‘My dear Scrooge, how are you? When will you come to see me?’ No
beggars implored him to bestow a trifle, no children asked him what it
was o’clock, no man or woman ever once in all his life inquired the way
to such and such a place, of Scrooge. Even the blind men’s dog appeared
to know him, and when they saw him coming on, would tug their owners
into doorways and up courts; and then would wag their tails, as though
they said, ‘No eye at all is better than an evil eye, dark master!” (Ch.
Dickens)
26
Antithesis is based on relative opposition which arises out of the context
through the expansion of objectively contrasting pairs and is often
moulded in parallel constructions, as in:
“Youth is lovely, age is lonely,
Youth is fiery, age is frosty;” (H. Longfellow)
27
utterance would be: ‘Those who ought to suffer were enjoying
themselves in Italy (where well-to-do English people go for holidays).’
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thoughts and feelings. Uttered represented speech demands that the
tense should be switched from present to past and the personal pronouns
should be changed from 1st and 2nd person to 3rd person as in indirect
speech, but the syntactical structure of the utterance does not change [1,
p.98]. E.g.:
“His anonymous correspondent's criticism, however, lingered in his
mind. Did he really fail to come to grips with his characters? Perhaps he
did.” (L.P. Hartley)
“Over and over he was asking himself: would she receive him? Would
she recognize him? What should he say to her?” “Why weren’t things
going well between them? He wondered.” [7, p.243].
Frequently inner represented speech thrusts itself into the narrative of
the author without any introductory words and the shift from the author’s
speech to inner represented speech is more or less perceptible. E.g.:
“Butler was sorry that he had called his youngest a baggage; but these
children – God bless his soul – were a great annoyance. Why, in the
name of all the saints, wasn’t this house good enough for them?” (Th.
Dreiser)
The only indication of the transfer from the author’s speech to inner
represented speech is the semicolon which suggests a longish pause. The
emotional tension of the inner represented speech is enhanced by the
emphatic these (in ‘these children’), by the exclamatory sentences ‘God
bless his soul’ and ‘in the name of all saints’. This emotional charge
gives an additional shade of meaning to the ‘was sorry’ in the author’s
statement, viz. Butler was sorry, but he was also trying to justify himself
for calling his daughter names.
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express various kinds of modal shades of meaning: doubt, challenge,
scorn, irony. E.g.:
“Are these the remedies for a starving and desperate populace?” (G.
Byron)
“Have I not had to wrestle with my lot?
Have I not suffered things to be forgiven?” (G. Byron)
30
particular consonants, in close succession, particularly at the beginning
of successive words [7, p.126]. E.g.:
“Deep into the darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortals ever dared to dream before”
(E.A. Poe)
“And where was the Mystery, Minor or Major?” (E. Farjeon)
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EXTENSION
THEME
In fiction, the theme is not intended to teach or preach. In fact, it is not
presented directly at all. You extract it from the characters, action, and
setting that make up the story. In other words, you must figure out the
theme yourself.
The writer's task is to communicate on a common ground with the reader.
Although the particulars of your experience may be different from the
details of the story, the general underlying truths behind the story may be
just the connection that both you and the writer are seeking [19, p.12].
Finding the Theme
Here are some ways to uncover the theme in a story: Check out the title.
Sometimes it tells you a lot about the theme.
Notice repeating patterns and symbols. Sometimes these lead you to the
theme.
What allusions are made throughout the story?
What are the details and particulars in the story? What greater meaning
may they have?
Remember that theme, plot, and structure are inseparable, all helping to
inform and reflect back on each other. Also, be aware that a theme we
determine from a story never completely explains the story. It is simply one
of the elements that make up the whole.
Themes grow out of the meeting of the text and the reader, that is why a
reader may see several themes in a text. A theme is not the same as the
message of a work. A theme could be expressed in a couple of words like
"pursuit of happiness" or "heartache". It is typically a unifying idea that is a
recurrent element in a literary work, or in many literary works, whereas the
message of a work is the moral lesson the writer wants to convey. For
example, a possible message could be "Not everyone wants to eat green
eggs and ham, no matter the location." The theme might be "have an open
mind" [5, p.30].
TONE
Tone is a literary technique that is a part of composition, which
encompasses the attitudes toward the subject and toward the audience
implied in a literary work. Tone may be formal, informal, intimate, solemn,
somber, playful, serious, ironic, condescending, or many other possible
attitudes [13].
Authors set a tone in literature by conveying an emotion or emotions
through words. It is also the narrator's predominant attitude towards the
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subject (which can be a character, a setting, an event or an idea). The way a
person feels about an idea, event, or another person can be quickly
determined through facial expressions, gestures and in the tone of voice
used. In literature, an author sets the tone through words and narrative
techniques that are used. The possible tones are as boundless as the number
of possible emotions a human being can have. The easiest way to establish
the tone in a text would be observing the use of emotionally coloured
words, that is, words the connotation of which varies (positive, negative) [5,
p. 46].
SETTING
In fiction, setting includes the time, location, circumstances, and
characters, everything in which a story takes place, and provides the main
backdrop and mood for a story. Elements of setting may include culture,
historical period, geography, and hour. Along with plot, character, theme,
and style, setting is considered one of the fundamental components of
fiction.
Setting may take a key role in plot, as in man vs. nature or man vs.
society stories. In some stories the setting becomes a character itself. In
such roles setting may be considered a plot device or literary device.
Setting can add an important dimension of meaning, reflecting character
and embodying theme.
ATMOSPHERE
Atmosphere is the emotional response that the reader or the characters
have to the setting of a work. Sometimes the atmosphere is difficult to
define. Nevertheless, in most cases it is inseparable from the sensuous
quality of the setting, sometimes the physical response to it. The atmosphere
can render pain, discomfort, weariness, oppression, mystery, fear,
foreboding, danger or other sensations [5, p. 47].
INTERTEXTUALITY
Intertextuality is a relationship between two or more texts that quote
from one another, allude to one another, or otherwise connect [13]. It is the
shaping of texts' meanings by other texts. It can refer to an author’s
borrowing and transformation of a prior text or to a reader’s referencing of
one text in reading another.
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PLOT
In a narrative, the plot is the primary sequence of events. A narrative
must have a plausible chain of events for it to evoke the desired response
from an audience [13].
In its simplest sense, the plot guides the author in composing the work
and helps the reader follow the work. Typically, plots exhibit causality and
unity and have a beginning, middle, and an end.
The basic question concerning plot structure is "Why does this happen?"
- "The king died, and then the queen died of grief". Texts can have widely
differing degrees of plot connectivity: some are tightly plotted or have
linear plots where everything ties in with everything else (the characters
want to fulfil dreams, go on a quest, realize plans, inhibit the plans of
others, overcome problems, pass tests etc.); others have mosaic plots, i.e.,
are loosely plotted, episodic, accident-driven, and possibly avoid causal
plotting altogether [10, p.23-24].
Conflict is a necessary element of the plot in fictional literature; it is the
issue to be resolved in the story. It is often classified according to the nature
of the antagonist. The conflict that places a character against his own will,
his own confusion, or his own fears, the struggle of the human being to
come to a decision is the basis of Man vs. Himself conflict (Hamlet). Man
vs. Man (The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes) is a class of conflicts in
fiction in which a character mainly faces challenges brought by other
people. Man vs. Society (Sister Carrie) is a class of conflicts in fiction in
which a main character, or group of main characters is in conflict with
social traditions or concepts. Man vs. Nature (The Rhyme of the Ancient
Mariner) places a character against forces of nature. Man vs. Supernatural
(Dracula) - places a character against supernatural forces [5, p.62-63].
When an entity is in conflict with his, her, or itself, the conflict is
categorized as internal (the character is torn between opposing features of
his personality). Otherwise, it is external (between human beings or
between man and the environment). The act of conflict involves the
protagonist (positive character) and the antagonist (negative character).
The plot may be analyzed by examining its traditional elements as
exposition, inciting moment, rising action, climax, falling action and
resolution (or denouement).
FREYTAG’S PYRAMID
Gustav Freytag was a Nineteenth Century German novelist who saw
common patterns in the plots of stories and novels and developed a diagram
to analyze them [17]. He diagrammed a story's plot using a pyramid like the
one shown here:
34
Exposition: setting the scene. The writer introduces the characters and
setting, providing description and background. The exposition ends with the
inciting moment, which is the incident without which there would be no
story.
Inciting Incident: something happens to begin the action. A single event
usually signals the beginning of the main conflict. The inciting incident is
sometimes called 'the complication'. It sets the remainder of the story in
motion beginning with the rising action.
Rising Action: the story builds and gets more exciting. During rising
action, the basic conflict is complicated by the introduction of related
secondary conflicts, including various obstacles that frustrate the
protagonist’s attempt to reach their goal. Secondary conflicts can include
adversaries of lesser importance than the story’s antagonist, who may work
with the antagonist or separately, by and for themselves or actions.
Climax or turning point: the moment of greatest tension in a story. This
is often the most exciting event. It is the event that the rising action builds
up to and that the falling action follows. It is the turning point which marks
a change, for the better or the worse, in the protagonist’s affairs.
Falling Action: events happen as a result of the climax and we know that
the story will soon end. During the falling action, the conflict between the
protagonist and the antagonist unravels, with the protagonist winning or
losing against the antagonist. The falling action might contain a moment of
final suspense, during which the final outcome of the conflict is in doubt or
resolution.
Resolution: the character solves the main problem/conflict or someone
solves it for him or her.
Dénouement: (a French term, pronounced: day-noo-moh) the ending. At
this point, any remaining secrets, questions or mysteries which remain after
the resolution are solved by the characters or explained by the author.
35
Sometimes the author leaves us to think about the THEME or future
possibilities for the characters.
You can think of the dénouement as the opposite of the exposition:
instead of getting ready to tell us the story by introducing the setting and
characters, the author is getting ready to end it with a final explanation of
what actually happened and how the characters think or feel about it. This
can be the most difficult part of the plot to identify, as it is often very
closely tied to the resolution [17].
The comedy ends with a dénouement (a conclusion) in which the
protagonist is better off than at the story’s outset. The tragedy ends with a
catastrophe in which the protagonist is worse off than at the beginning of
the narrative.
Although Freytag’s analysis of dramatic structure is based on five-act
plays, it can be applied (sometimes in a modified manner) to short stories
and novels as well [14, p.2].
36
A homodiegetic narrator describes his or her personal and subjective
experiences as a character in the story. Such a narrator cannot know
anything more about what goes on in the minds of any of the other
characters than is revealed through their actions.A special case of the
homodiegetic narrator is the autodiegetic narrator, who shares the features
with the homodiegetic one; however he is not any character in the story, but
its protagonist. A heterodiegetic narrator, on the other hand, describes the
experiences of the characters that appear in the story not being one of them.
POINT OF VIEW
The narrator in any work has certain characteristics and limitations that
define how the author can tell the story. Most importantly, a narrator can
only tell the reader things that he has experienced. There are several kinds
of points of view: objective, first person, third person, and omniscient and
limited omniscient points of view [19, p. 22].
37
IMAGE AND SYMBOL
An image is a word, phrase, or figure of speech (especially a simile or a
metaphor) that addresses the senses, suggesting mental pictures of sights,
sounds, smells, tastes, feelings, or actions. Images offer sensory impressions
to the reader and convey emotions through verbal pictures. They evoke a
blend of emotional, spiritual, intellectual and cultural responses in the
reader. Readers' responses to images vary because of their varied
experiences and associations. Images are either literal or figurative. Literal
images are especially concrete and involve little or no extension of the
obvious meaning of the words used to express them. Figurative images do
not follow the literal meaning of the words exactly. Images in literature are
usually visual, but the term "image" can also refer to the representation of
any sensory experience.
In the song "Where the Wild Roses Grow" by Nick Cave we can find the
visual figurative image of female beauty (For her lips were the colour of
the roses/They grew down the river, all bloody and wild), the auditive literal
image of the last moments of the character's life (And the last thing I heard
was a muttered word), and the visual figurative image of death (And lent
down and planted a rose between her teeth). An array of images in a literary
work that contribute to the creation of an unified picture is called imagery.
Literary works are often admired for their artful use of symbolism, i.e.
the use of words, phrases and situations to evoke ideas and feelings beyond
their plain interpretations; these uses are the subject of literary semiotics. A
symbol is a representation of something - a person, a place, an institution or
organization, an emotion, a concept. Symbols are like images, in that they
rely on associations, but whereas an image may function literally as only a
visual image, to say that something is a symbol is to claim that it has an
abstract signification or meaning. For example V is not only two lines
meeting diagonally at a point; it is also a symbol of victory [5, p.94-95].
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A frame story (also frame tale, frame narrative, matrix narrative etc.) is a
narrative technique by means of which a main story is composed, at least in
part, for the purpose of organizing a set of shorter stories, each of which is a
story within a story.
Achrony is a sequence of unordered events in the story [5, p. 106].
TIME ANALYSIS
Time analysis is concerned with the order of the events that occur in a
story and with the proportioning of story time and discourse time.
An anachrony is a deviation from strict chronology in a story. The two
main types of anachrony are flashbacks and flashforwards.
A flashback is the presentation of events that have occurred before the
beginning of the main events narrated in the story. A flash-forward is the
presentation of a future event before its proper time. An objective
flashforward presents an event that will actually occur; whereas a
subjective flashforward is just a character's vision of a likely future event.
Repetitive anachronies (both flashforwards and flashbacks) recall
already narrated events; completive anachronies present events that are
omitted in the primary story. External anachronies present events that take
place before the beginning or after the end of the primary story; while
anachronies that fall within the range of the primary story are internal
anachronies.
The time it takes an average reader to read a passage, or, more generally,
the whole text is defined as discourse time. The fictional time taken up by
the events in the text is called story time [5, p.117].
If it takes you less time to read the text (30 minutes) than for the events in
it to happen (a week), the durational aspect of this text will be identified as
speed-up presentation. On the contrary, if the events of the text take up a
shorter time span (a day) and the reader needs a longer period of time (5
days) to read them, the durational aspect of the episode or of the whole
story will be a slow-down presentation. Finally, if the story time of the text
is equal to its discourse time it is an instance of real-time presentation in a
story.
However, there are two additional patterns of durational aspect. A stretch
of story time that is not textually represented at all is called ellipsis. During
a pause, however, discourse time elapses on description or comment, while
story time stops and no action actually takes place [5, p.118].
NARRATIVE MODE
The narrative mode (also known as the mode of narration) is the
attribute of a literary, theatrical, cinematic, or musical piece which describes
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the method used by the author(s) to convey their story to the reader. It
encompasses several overlapping areas of concern, most importantly
narrative point of view (also known as viewpoint), which determines the
person whose eyes the story is viewed through, and narrative voice, which
determines how it is expressed to the audience.
The person whose point of view is used to relate the story is regarded as
the narrator, a character developed by the author for the specific purpose of
conveying the story. The narrative point-of-view is meant to be the related
experience of the character of this narrator - not that of the actual author
(although, in some cases, especially in non-fiction, it is possible for the
narrator and author to be the same person). In fiction, authors often do not
inject third-person: "that happened, the king died", etc.
The narrative mode encompasses not only who tells the story, but also
how the story is described or expressed, for example by using stream of
consciousness or unreliable narration [13].
There are only two major narrative modes: scene and summary.
Scene/scenic presentation is a showing mode that presents a continuous
stream of detailed action events. Summary is a telling mode in which the
narrator condenses a sequence of action events into a thematically focused
and orderly account.
In addition to the two major modes, there are two minor or supportive
modes: description and comment. These modes are supportive rather than
constitutive because no-one can tell a story using description and comment
alone.
Description is a telling mode in which the narrator introduces a character
or describes the setting.
Comment is a telling mode in which the narrator comments on
characters, the development of the action, and the circumstances of the act
of narrating [5, p.89].
FOCALIZATION
Focalization is a term coined by the French narrative theorist Gerard
Genette. It refers to the perspective through which a narrative is presented.
For example, a narrative where all information presented reflects the
subjective perception of that information by a certain character is said to be
internally focalized. An omniscient narrator corresponds to external
focalization. A novel in which no simple rules restrict the transition between
different focalizations could be said to be unfocalized, but specific
relationships between basic types of focalization constitute more complex
focalization strategies; for example, a novel could provide external
focalization alternating with internal focalizations through three different
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characters, where the second character is never focalized except after the
first, and three other characters are never focalized at all [13].
Functionally, focalization is a means of selecting and restricting narrative
information, of seeing events and states of affairs from somebody's point of
view, of foregrounding the focalizing agent, and of creating an empathetical
or ironical view on the focalizer. A focalizer is the agent whose point of
view orients the narrative text. A text is anchored on a focalizer's point of
view when it presents (and does not transcend) the focalizer's thoughts,
reflections and knowledge, his/her actual and imaginary perceptions, as well
as his/her cultural and ideological orientation.
Although the primary candidate for a text's perspectival orientation is the
narrator (presenting an external focalization of the world of story), a text's
information may also be restricted to a character's field of perception.
Indeed, the major question of focalization is whether there is internal
focalization, i.e., whether the narrative events are presented from a
character's point of view. Four main forms or patterns of focalization can be
distinguished:
Fixed focalization - the presentation of narrative facts and events from the
constant point of view of a single focalizer.
Variable focalization - the presentation of different episodes of the story as
seen through the eyes of several focalizers.
Multiple focalization - a technique of presenting an episode repeatedly,
each time seen through the eyes of a different (internal) focalizer. Typically,
what is demonstrated by this technique is that different people tend to
perceive or interpret the same event in radically different fashion. Texts that
are told by more than one narrator (such as epistolary novels) create
multiple focalization based on external focalizers.
Collective focalization - focalization through either plural narrators ("we
narrative") or a group of characters ("collective reflectors") [5, p.90-91].
SUMMARY
1. A summary is a clear concise orderly retelling of the contents of a
passage or a text and is ordinarily about 1/3 or 1/4 as long as the original [1,
p. 21]. The student who is in the habit of searching for the main point,
understanding them, learning them, and reviewing them is educating
himself. The ability to get at the essence of a matter is important.
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• Reread the text and underline important ideas and arguments
according to the main statement
• Introduce the author and title of the work in the opening sentence
• Mention the important facts in chronological order
• Check that your summary reflects the original conclusion
The first and most important step in making a summary is reading the
passage thoroughly. After it a) write out clearly in your own words the main
points of the selection. Subordinate or eliminate minor points, b) Retain the
paragraphing of the original unless the summary is extremely short.
Preserve the proportion of the original. c) Change direct narration to indirect
whenever it is possible, use words instead of word combinations and word
combinations instead of sentences, d) Omit figures of speech, repetitions,
and most examples, e) Do not use personal pronouns, use proper names, f)
Do not introduce any extra material by way of opinion, interpretation or
appreciation.
Read the selection again and critisize and revise your words [1, p.21-22].
2. To give a summary of the text, as well as for other similar
assignments, the following phrases may be helpful. Try and use the ones
that are most suitable for the occasion.
2.1 Signal words and word combinations to begin with
a) At the beginning of the story (in the beginning) the author describes
(depicts, dwells on, touches upon, explains, introduces, mentions, recalls,
characterizes, critisizes, analyses, comments on, enumerates, points out,
generalizes, makes a few critical remarks, reveals, exposes, accuses,
blames, condemns, mocks at, ridicules, praises, sings somebody's praises,
sympathises with, gives a summary of, gives his account of, makes an
excursus into, digresses from the subject to describe the scenery, to
enumerate, etc.).
b) The story (the author) begins with a/the description of, the mention
of, the analysis of, a/ the comment on, a review of, an account of, a
summary of, the characterization of, his opinion of, his recollection of, the
enumeration of, the criticism of, some / a few critical remarks about, the
accusation of, the /his praises of, the ridicule of, the generalization of, an
excursus into.
c) The story opens with ...
d) The scene is laid in...
e) The opening scene shows ...
f) We first meet him (her) as a student of... (a girl of 15)
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2.2 Signal words and word combinations to go on
Then (after that, further, further on, next) the author passes on to…(goes
on to say that..., gives a detailed description (analysis etc.) of digresses from
the subject, etc.). For the rest see the verbs in list la).
2.3 Signal words and word combinations to conclude
a) In conclusion the author describes ...
b) The author concludes with ...
c) The story ends with ...
d) To finish with the author describes ...
e) At the end of the story the author draws the conclusion (comes to the
conclusion) that...
f) At the end of the story the author sums it all up (by saying...)
g) The concluding words are ...
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c. Conclusion:
in conclusion, finally, lastly, to conclude
d. Equivalence:
in other words, that means, namely, that is to say, or, rather, i.e. (formal
and written)
e. Inclusion:
for example, for instance, say (informal), such as, as follows (written),
e.g. (formal and written)
f. Highlighting:
in particular, in detail, especially, notably, chiefly, mainly
g. Generalisation:
usually, normally, as a rule, in general, for the most part, in most cases,
on the whole
h. Stating the obvious:
obviously, naturally, of course, clearly
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SOURCES
18. http://www.uni-koeln.de/~ame02/pppd.htm
19. www.learner.org/exhibits/literature/read/setting1.html
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