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Keywords: free indirect discourse
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Chapter
Published: 14 February 2014
... Breuer Josef Kramnick Jonathan Crane Stephen 1871–1900 Riis Jacob 1849–1914 Curtis Edward Edison Thomas Koch Robert Muybridge Eadweard Woodward Joseph J Zunshine Lisa Gaskill Nicholas Taine Hippolyte Powers Richard novel science medicine technology free indirect discourse Charles...
Chapter
Published: 17 December 2009
...In this chapter I consider the properties of the so-called Free Indirect Discourse, which is a peculiar literary style created with the precise purpose of giving rise to a particular narrative effect. I show that FID sentences can be interpreted by means of the same grammatical apparatus needed...
Book
Published online: 01 February 2010
Published in print: 17 December 2009
.... Finally, analysis of the literary style known as Free Indirect Discourse also supports the hypothesis, showing that it may have a wide range of consequences....
Chapter
Published: 17 December 2015
... “immoral moralism.” The techniques of free indirect discourse and dramatic monologue allowed the exploration of moral ambiguities and tested the established proprieties of literature. Benjamin Walter Burton Richard D E censorship trials LaCapra Dominick Woolf Virginia censorship effect Culler...
Chapter
Published: 01 December 2016
... Elizabeth Samaritanship adverse possession law Aristotle in propria persona Keats John Abrams M H demesne Bersani Leo bildungsroman Shakespeare William Cowper William Jane Austen Edmund Burke conservative novelists free indirect discourse manor Mansfield Park possessive individualism One...
Chapter
Published: 16 May 2017
..., this chapter tracks themes of both labor and management in Ashbery’s experimental second book, The Tennis Court Oath. In this book the standpoint of the earlier poem gives way to an explosion of shifting voices as Ashbery’s distinctive use of free indirect discourse and other techniques of point of view...
Chapter
Published: 18 July 2023
... is famous for a technique called “free indirect discourse” or “free indirect style”: on one influential view, such passages occur when a narrator neither quotes a character’s thoughts directly nor has her own thought about the character, but instead intersperses sentences from the character’s point of view...
Chapter
Published: 21 February 2023
... to her aesthetic and ethical, albeit secular and modern, defense of the “soul,” and to her polemic against medical and psychological authoritarianism—a polemic that reaches its apogee in Mrs. Dalloway (1925). Yet Woolf’s use of free-indirect discourse as a narrative mode that offers...
Chapter
Published: 14 December 2015
... theorizations of inherited elements of discourse (motif, topos) in Veselovsky and Curtius. Finally, the issue of a worldview’s formal correlates, important in Soviet Marxist stylistics, is tackled with reference to the use of free indirect discourse in Pushkin’s Bronze Horseman. Croce Benedetto...
Chapter
Published: 27 January 2013
... of the structure, narrative style, and management of voices demonstrates how, for the beginning of his writing career, Joyce is a sophisticated rhetorician. His subtle handling of free indirect discourse, figurative language, chiasmus, anticlimax, and silence document his early experimentalism. Joyce's debt...
Chapter
Published: 08 May 2023
... Ivan Goldie Peter interior monologue MacNamara Brinsley Manchester stream of consciousness Ulysses Stephen Dedalus accent free indirect discourse modernism space time Dublin places “Painful Case A” Dubliners Pearse P H Patrick Shakespeare William Childers Erskine Civil War Irish Irish...
Chapter
Published: 17 October 2023
... to the disproportionate bodies of Buñuel’s early characters, expresses the poetic excess of what Pasolini calls a ‘free-indirect-discourse’ in cinema. cinema of attractions That Obscure Object of Desire Un chien andalou Fuentes Carlos Los olvidados modern cinema movement image multiplicity multiple nouvelle...
Chapter
Published: 01 October 2015
...This study aims to account for how tenses in Russian contribute to creating the effect of bivocality in indirect discourse and in a particular case of Free Indirect Discourse (FID). The use and readings of tenses in Russian are compared to French. The analysis is based on the assumption...
Chapter
Published: 01 October 2015
...This work is concerned with Free Indirect Discourse (FID), a narrative style that gives the reader the impression of listening directly to the thoughts, or to the speech, of the speaker or main character of the narration. The general question to be addressed is the following: to what extent does...
Chapter
Published: 19 December 2019
... Marie affordances inference plot transformations free indirect discourse metafictional nudges Tolstoy Lev Anna Karenina narration Austen Jane fiction Fludernik Monika estrangement form perception sensory attenuation time horizons plot events fictional worlds plot trajectory flow...
Chapter
Published: 11 August 2021
... underrecognized both because of its gendered association with formlessness, and because stream of consciousness is often simply conflated with interior monologue, which she mostly did not use. Instead, Woolf’s contributions include her use of free indirect discourse to overcome the egotism of the first person...
Chapter
Published: 16 November 2017
... vectorial space of Deleuze’s action-image. Instead, inspired by Pier Paolo Pasolini’s seminal essay, ‘The “Cinema of Poetry”’, the chapter notes that all four filmmakers resort to a form of free-indirect discourse, whereby animality fills up the film from the inside as formative of the representation rather...
Chapter
Published: 28 October 2021
..., in the same vein, that subjective clauses of free indirect discourse do not (generally) advance narrative time, and suggests that this is because stative aspect, which does not (generally) induce a temporal update, is obligatory for clauses with a subjective point of view. The chapter will critically examine...
Chapter
Published: 21 November 2024
... them, Crockett Johnson’s narrator creates an emotional intimacy between the reader and the boy, encouraging them to imagine Harold imagining. The chapter also identifies the narration as a “kind of” free indirect discourse because its diction and perspective exceed that of the 3-year-old protagonist...
Chapter
Published: 18 February 2010
... of stylistic and grammatical devices, including free indirect discourse, aid character‐focused narration and serve, on occasions, to encourage empathic contact with characters Genette G Gunn D Halliwell S James H Republic The Ambassadors The Moby Dick narrative point of view Tilford J...