Title: LANGUAGE AND THE FICTIONAL WORLD
1LANGUAGE AND THE FICTIONAL WORLD
2Notion of realism
- credibility
- verisimilitude
- authenticity
- objectivity
- vividness
3LANGUAGE, REALITY AND REALISM
4REALITY AND MOCK REALITY
How, in the world of history and public events,
does language serve to build up or to extend our
model of reality?
- The language of the newspaper headlinesnewspaper
headlines are an extreme case of the influence of
background knowledge on interpretation. Eg. Man
helping murder police
- The language of the newspaper report in its
narrative functions, comes a step closer to
fictional discourse and one could also imagine in
it the basis for a short story
5SPECIFICATION OF DETAIL SYMBOLISM AND REALISM
- What was the precise sequence of events?
- What did the protagonists say to one another?
- Precisely when, where, and how did the kidnap,
the murder, the release, the suicide take place? - Why did each event take place?
6What kind of detail, and how much detail, should
be added to fill out the model of reality?
THE ARTISTIC CRITERIA OF RELEVANCE
7VERISIMILITUDE
- the colour of a chair
- the time at which the train leaves
- the kind of wood a table is made of
- the name of a person
8CREDIBILITY
SCIENCE FICTION
9REAL SPEECH AND FICTIONAL SPEECH
10REALISM IN CONVERSATION
Its the ability to render in writing the
characteristic of spoken conversational language
11FEATURES OF NORMAL NON- FLUENCY
- Hesitation pauses
- False starts
- Syntactic anomalies
12- My first meeting with Oscar Wilde was an
astonishment. I never before heard a man talking
with perfect sentences, as if he had written them
all overnight with labour and yet all
spontaneous. - W. B. Yeats, The trembling of the Veil
13DIALECT AND IDIOLECT
From Dickens we may take at random Sam Wellers
rendering of w as v in Pickwick Papers there
a pair of Vellingtons a good deal vorn
14EYE-DIALECT
- The impression of rendering non-standard speech
by non-standard spelling is pure illusion and
its not only a literary phenomenon.
- He wos wery good to me, he wos in Bleak House
- cats n dogs
15THE FUNCTIONS OF DIALECT ANDIDIOLECT ARE VARIOUS
16THE RENDERING OF THE FICTION
Function of stylistic choice
- interpersonal
- textual
- ideational
17Three corresponding function in the reading of
fictions
- Fictional point of view it correspond to the
interpersonal function - of style and present the slanting of the
fictional world - towards reality as apprehended by a particular
- partecipant in the fiction
- Fictional sequencing it is an aspect of a more
general topic - which belongs to the textual function of
language - Descriptive focus an area of fictional technique
where mock reality - interacts with the ideational choices of meaning
through which it is - portrayed
18The writer has to chose the sequencing
- Psychological sequencing, the order in which a
character comes to learn about the components of
the fiction - Chronology
- Presentational sequencing, the appropriate order
in which the reader should learn the elements of
the fiction - Physical and abstract description
- Subjective and objective description
19SPEECH AND CHARACTER
Is this place of abomination consecrated
ground? I dont know nothink of consequential
ground, says Jo, still staring... Is it
blessed? Im blest if I know, says Jo, staring
more than ever but I shouldnt think it warnt.
Blest? repeats Jo, something troubled in his
mind. It ant done it much good if it is.
Blest? I should think it was tothered myself.
But I dont know nothink!
- There are pronunciation
like - Warnt for wasnt
- Nothink for nothing
- Double negatives such as I dont know nothink
-