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Events

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Title: Events


1
Lecture 5
  • Events

2
Readings
  • Bal, Narratology, 1.2, 2.3-2.3
  • Chatman, Story and Discourse, chapter 2
  • Genette, Narrative Discourse, pp. 25-160
  • Rimmon-Kenan, Narrative Fiction, chapter 2
  • Toolan, Narrative, 2.1, 3.1-3.3

3
Importance of Events
  • Important for narrative and its definition
  • Events are the constituents of a story, and are
    thus crucial to the it. Without events, there
    will be no story.
  • Definitions
  • Bal transition of one state to another,
  • Rimmon-Kenan (1983 15) a change from one
    state of affairs to another.
  • An event is essentially a process, an alteration,
    which deals with the occurrence of change.

4
Events and the Minimal Story
  • The importance of events to the story can be
    illustrated in the definitions of a minimal story
  • Seems to be essential even in a minimal story

5
Importance of Events to Propp
  • To Propp, the study of what is done should
    precede the question of who does it and how it
    is done.
  • Thus to Propp, events (what is done) is prior
    to character or agency of the action (who does
    it), and the style of the action or means by
    which it is done (how it is done).

6
Micro- and Macro-Sequences of Events
7
Micro- and Macro-Sequences of Events
  • In Chatman's approach, the major and minor events
    of a story can be compared to what he calls the
    story's kernels and satellites
  • kernels are the building blocks of a plot, they
    are the branching points in a story by which
    choices between alternative courses of action
    take place
  • satellites (also called catalysts) are involved
    in the elaboration and filling-in of kernels
    (1978 53-6)

8
Temporal Succession and Causality
  • There are two ways by which we relate the
    proximate events in a story either in terms of
  • temporal succession or
  • causality.

9
Importance of Temporal Succession
  • Temporal succession has a connection with the
    actual chronology of the narrative.
  • Because of its importance, some scholars have
    defined narrative in terms of temporal
    succession.
  • However, like the definition which hinges on the
    minimal narrative, this may be too simple (or
    skeletal) a definition of narrative for most
    other scholars or students of narrative

10
Causality
  • E. M. Forsters famous distinction between story,
    which is merely a succession of events, and plot,
    which involves causality.
  • Events may be causally recursive, in the sense
    that one event causes another, which in turn
    causes another, and so on (note that the use of
    the word recursive here is quite different from
    its use in linguistics, as it involves a linear
    instead of a hierarchical ordering).

11
Temporal Succession and Causality
  • Through language
  • Indicating Causal Connection Use of conjunctions
    or conjunctive adjuncts such as because, since,
    as, therefore, hence, thus, consequently, as a
    result, for this reason, because of that.
  • Indicating Temporal Succession (causal connection
    to be inferred by the reader) Use of
    conjunctions or conjunctive adjuncts such as and,
    later, afterwards, after which, prior to that,
    before that.

12
Temporal Succession and Causality Language
13
Temporal Succession and Causality Film
  • In cinematic narratives however, it is usually
    the case that causality is indicated by a
    succession of images we establish causality
    through our understanding of how such images
    encode events which are causally related in
    everyday life (or in other films or narratives).

14
Events, Characters and Actions
  • An event may arise from the (conscious) action of
    a character.
  • In fact, one definition of action is that it is
    an event initiated by a character.
  • Also, it may arise from natural causes, or
  • Inner psychological states
  • (Involuntary actions)

15
Collection of Events
  • An event may not involve only a single action,
    but may constitute a collection of the actions of
    a character or characters in this case, it may
    be appropriate, in certain contexts, to describe
    it as a macro-event.
  • However, the distinction between event and macro-
    or micro-event may not be relevant in the
    analysis of many narratives.

16
Events in Relation to Story and Discourse
  • Dealt with earlier
  • Disjunctions between the two quite common

17
Order of Events and Anachrony
  • There are two types of anachrony analepsis or
    prolepsis. The three terms were introduced into
    narrative studies by Genette (1980 35-47).

18
Analepsis
  • Involves the narration of a story-event after
    later events have been told. They may involve a
    flashback, retrospection or (after Genette)
    analepsis.

19
Prolepsis
  • Involves the narration of a story-event before
    earlier events have been told. Prolepsis is
    different from merely hinting at a future
    occurrence it is different from anticipation as
    we normally understand the word (cf. Bal 1985
    63-6).

20
Another way of looking at anachrony
  • To view it in terms of the telling of an event to
    the past or future of what can be called the
    narrative now (see Talib 1990).
  • Narrative now is that of the narrator
  • Character-motivated anachrony does not fully
    deviate from the assumed chronology.

21
Duration
  • An important consideration in the study of events
    is duration, that is to say, how long the event
    is for example, whether
  • it lasts an hour, a year or only a few minutes
  • it is long or short or
  • it could be measured in terms of x till y
    (Rimmon-Kenan 1983 46).

22
Duration Story and discourse
  • Story and discourse may have different effects on
    duration.

23
Duration Some Terms.
  • acceleration,
  • deceleration,
  • ellipsis
  • descriptive pause and
  • scene.

Defined
24
Duration Acceleration Deceleration
  • In acceleration, one devotes a short segment of
    the text or discourse to the event, which occurs
    over a comparatively longer time span in the
    story deceleration is the other way round.
  • Acceleration and deceleration are relative to the
    norm established for the text.

25
Duration Ellipsis Descriptive Pause
  • The contrast between story time and discourse
    time may result in ellipsis, where an event in
    the story is deleted in the discourse.
  • On the other hand, it may result in a descriptive
    pause, where time in the story is stretched or
    suspended in discourse in order to describe
    something

26
Duration Scene
  • In a scene, story duration and discourse (or
    text) duration are conventionally considered
    identical.
  • Dialogue is often regarded as the best example of
    scene the narrator virtually disappears here.
  • In a cinematic narrative, the equivalence of
    story duration to discourse (or text) duration in
    a scene is more easily measured than in written
    narratives (which are affected by different
    reading times)

27
Frequency
  • We ask how often an event occurs.
  • This question can be asked in relation to how
    many times the event occurs in a minute, a month,
    or a page (Rimmon-Kenan 1983 46).
  • Refers to either to story, discourse or (within
    discourse) discourse levels
  • A minute, for example, refers either to story or
    discourse
  • It is likely that a month refers to story
  • Whereas a page refers to discourse

28
Events and the Plot
  • The events of a story may combine to form the
    plot
  • Events are the building blocks of the plot.
  • As such, they form an essential part of any
    analysis of the plot

29
Events and Setting
  • Mentioned earlier
  • To Bal the close linkage of certain events with
    their settings, such as declarations of love by
    moonlight, rendezvous in an inn, ghostly
    appearances among ruins, brawls in cafés, etc.

30
Events and Binary Categories
  • Some scholars, such as Lévi-Strauss, Greimas and
    Bremond, have analysed events in terms of binary
    categories
  • For example, Bremond whether an action has been
    done or not done, which results in an event
    occurring or not occurring.
  • This may be too simplistic for some of us

31
Event Labels
  • Events have been analysed by using event labels
    to name or classify them.
  • Such labels have been used by Barthes in his S/Z,
    where they are used not only be in the form of
    obvious one-word descriptions such as killing
    or marriage ceremony but also, in the form of
    propositions, or simple sentences used to
    describe the events, such as a kills b.

32
Event Labels Advantage Problem
  • May be more informative than classifying events
    in terms of simple binary categories
  • However, they may proliferate, and may not allow
    us to easily perceive general patterns in a
    narrative or in a group of narratives.
  • Thus, unlike the binary approach, which may
    suffer from too much simplicity, such an approach
    may suffer from too much complexity

33
Linguistic Analysis,
  • Which sentences/clauses/words represent the
    events of a story?

34
  • Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater,
  • Had a wife and couldn't keep her.
  • He put her in a pumpkin shell
  • And there he kept her, very well.

35
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36
End of Lecture
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