Literary discourse : a semiotic-pragmatic approach to literature /
At a moment when 'literature' threatens to be collapsed into other discourses, or to be subsumed by such terms as 'narrative' and 'genre, ' J°rgen Dines Johansen, although he recognizes its protean nature, focuses on literature itself as it relates to other discourses....
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Toronto, Ont. :
University of Toronto Press,
©2002.
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Colección: | Toronto studies in semiotics and communication.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Literature?
- 1 Trouble with Genres: The Instability of Categories
- 2 The Todorov Hypothesis
- 3 Exemplars and Contests
- PART 1 SIGN, DIALOGUE, DISCOURSE
- Chapter 1 From Sign to Dialogue
- 1.1 Representation
- 1.2 Immediate and Dynamical Object
- 1.3 Icons, Indices, and Symbols
- 1.4 The Uses of Iconic, Indexical, and Symbolic Signs
- 1.5 The Interpretants
- 1.6 Interpretant and Dialogue
- 1.7 Utterer and Addresser, Addressee and Interpreter
- 1.8 The Semiotic Pyramid
- 1.9 The Interrelations of the Immediate Interpretants1.10 Language
- 1.11 From Language to Text: The Three Levels of Linguistic Communication
- Chapter 2 Discourse and Text
- 2.1 Two Concepts of Discourse: Foucault and Habermas
- 2.2 Discourse and Text
- 2.3 The Four Discourses
- 2.4 Literary Discourse
- 2.5 Literature Becoming Literature
- PART 2 THE FOUR DIMENSIONS OF THE LITERARY TEXT
- Chapter 3 Mimesis: Literature as Imitation and Model
- 3.1 Literature as Representation and Fiction
- 3.2 Signs and Universes
- 3.3 Ten Features of a Fictional Universe3.4 The Relation of Fictional and Historical Universes
- 3.5 Similarity
- 3.6 Literature and the Claim to Truth
- 3.7 Fiction, Model, and Lifeworld
- Chapter 4 Self-representation and Analogy in Literature
- 4.1 Repetition as a Proto-aesthetic Phenomenon
- 4.2 Repetition, Analogy, and Poeticity
- 4.3 Analogy as a Cognitive and Textual Structural Principle
- 4.4 Analogy and Metaphor
- 4.5 From Repetition to Metaphor
- 4.6 The Self-representation of Narrative
- 4.7 Literature and the Existential Analogy
- Chapter 5 Literature as Self-expression: Subjectivity and Imagination5.1 Self-representation and Self-expression
- 5.2 Subject, Subjectivity, and Self-expression
- 5.3 The Subject in Literature and Fiction
- 5.4 The Subjective Thematics of Literature
- 5.5 Desire and Fiction: Persinna's Confession
- 5.6 Language, Materiality, and Repetition in Literature
- 5.7 Naming and Enumeration
- 5.8 Plenitude, Variety, Lack
- 5.9 Non omnis moriar
- Chapter 6 The Interpreters
- 6.1 Literature as an Institution
- 6.2 The Interpellation: Plaudite
- 6.3 Mistrusting the Author6.4 Vitally Important Subjects
- 6.5 Such stuff as dreams are made of
- 6.6 Reading as Iconizing
- 6.7 A Space of One's Own
- 6.8 Complexity and Ambiguity in the Communication of Literature
- PART 3 ON INTERPRETATION
- Chapter 7 Interpreting Literature
- 7.1 Interpretation as Semiosis
- 7.2 Interpretation as Prediction and Reconstruction
- 7.3 Reconstruction and/vs. Recontextualization
- 7.4 Interpretation as Abduction and Rational Reconstruction
- 7.5 The Practice and Predicaments of the Literary Interpretation