000 01812nam a2200229Ia 4500
003 OSt
005 20220310124843.0
008 220128s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9781496217141
040 _cCUS
082 _22nd ed.
_a808
_bHER/H
100 _aHerman, Luc
_94699
245 0 _aHandbook Of Narrative Analysis
260 _aLincoln,
_bNebraska:
_c2019.
300 _aix,424p.
505 _a List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Traditional Questions 2. New Questions Chapter 1. Before and Surrounding Structuralism 1. Story and Plot 2. Telling and Showing 3. Author and Narrator 4. Narrator and Reader 5. Consciousness and Speech 6. Perception and Speech Chapter 2. Structuralism 1. Story 1.1. Events 1.2. Actants 1.3. Setting 2. Narrative 2.1. Time 2.2. Character 2.3. Focalization 3. Narration 3.1. Narrating 3.2. Consciousness Representation Chapter 3. Postclassical Narratology 1. Broadening Conceptions of the Narrative Text 1.1. Broadening the Medium: Intermedial Narratology 1.2. Broadening in Time: Diachronic Narratology 1.3. Broadening the Fictional World 2. Communicative Approaches 2.1. Rhetorical Narratology 2.2. Cognitive Narratology 3. Narratology and Ideology 3.1. Narrative Ethics 3.2. Feminist and Queer Narratology 3.3. Postcolonial Narratology 3.4. Cultural Narratology and Socio-narratology 3.4.1. Socio-narratology 3.4.2. Cultural Narratology 4. Everyday Life as a Narrative Process 4.1. Postmodern Narratology 4.2. Natural Narratology 4.3. Unnatural Narratology Appendix A: "Pegasian" Charlotte Mutsaers Appendix B: "The Map" Gerrit Krol Appendix C: "City" Wasco Notes Bibliography Index
650 _aErzähltheorie
_94702
650 _aNarration (Rhetoric)
_94703
700 _94701
_aVervaeck, Bart
942 _2ddc
_cWB16
947 _a3230.72
999 _c210703
_d210703