What is Paradigm and Syntagm?
Paradigm: Set of relationship between signifier and signified
Signifier: word itself and its sound
Signified: concept of a word
Homonym -> level of signifier
Synonym -> level of signified
Level of metaphor
Syntagm: position of a sign along a chain of signs
syntagmatic relationship: value of single sign made possible by signs that surround it
determines relationship of signs with eachother -> horizontal relation, Metonomy
Which kinds of irony exist?
Verbal irony: one thing said, antoher meant
Structural irony: reader and author know something that character/hero does not
Romantic irony: narrator builds up illusion of representing reality only to shatter it -> author/artist ist arbitrary creator -> breaking fourth wall
Tragic irony -> fate that could’ve never been averted
Dramatic irony: circumstance which lies in past, present or future, which character is not aware of
-> irony requires complicity between author and reader
common cultural norms
shared moral values
What differentiates a monologue from a soliloquy?
Monologue: lengthy speech by single person
soliloquiy: monologue in a play where character expresses private thoughts, alone on stage
What is text, what is narration and what is story?
story: narrated events in chronological order
Text: spoken or written discours, not necessarily chronological
narration: act or process of production
What are kernels and what are catalysts?
Kernels: advance action by opening new alternative
Catalysts: expand, amplify, mantain, delay action
What is duration, order and frequency?
durration: how long
order: when
frequency: how often
Which elements of duration exist?
Ellipsis: central event in story remains untold
acceleration: Event which takes longer time in story is only mentioned briefly in text/narrative (neagtive emphasis)
decelleration: positive emphasis
Scene: almost perfect correlation narrated time and time of narration
Pause: insignificant event takes forever in narrative -> banality, boredom etc.
What is diagesis and extradiagesis?
diagesis
Dialogue, anything within that world, duaration of events on level of story
extradiagesis
Time of narration (when its told by narrator, comments by narrator)
What elements of order exist?
Direction
Prolepsis (anticipation)
Analepsis (flashback)
Distance
internal
external
mixed
Reach
Punctual: single event
Durative: period of time
Homodiegetic: narrator part of story
Heterodiagetic: narrator outside story
Hypodiagetic: story within story (mis en abyme) -> each narrative subordinate to narrative within which it is embedded
What elements of frequency exist?
Singulative: something that happens once is told once
Repetitive: Telling x times what happened once
iterative: Telling once what happened many times
What elements of temporality of narration exist (distnace between events and their narration)?
Ulterior: retrospectiv, after the events
Anterior: prophecies
Simultaneous
Intercalated: telling and acting follow each other in alteration
What different kinds of hypodiagetic stories exist?
actional: maintain or advance first level of diagesis
explicative: explains diagetic circumstance
Thematic: analogy, points to similiarity or contrast
Mise an abyme -> self-reflection with the structure of literary work
What different kinds of diagetic narrators exist?
extradiagetic narrator: above the story, narrating diagesis
Intradiagetic narrator: part of diagesis, narrating hypodiagesis
Hypodiagetic narrator: part of hypodiagesis, narrating hypo-hypo-diagesis
What makes a narrator unreliable?
Personal involvement
limited knowledge
Problematic value scheme
Which different kinds of focalization exist?
From within: focus on emotions, inner life
Form without: focus on action
Variable (instability) vs. fixed
External/narrator-focalizer
Panachronic (unpersonifed, encompassing all time periods), retrospective
Unrestrictive knowledge
Objective (neutral, uninvolved)
Single, dominant perspective
internal/character focalized
Synchronic (limited to present of characters)
Restrictive knowledge
Subjective (colored by emotions)
Limited observer
ideology of character
Which different kinds of actions can characters perform?
habitual -> static
Singular (behaviour) -> dynamic, turning point
Acts of commission -> performed
acts of omission -> intentionally not performed
Contemplated acts -> unrealized untention
What strategies do texts use to stay alive?
Delay: not implanting information where its due in text
Gaps:
temporary or permantent
Prospective/retrospective: reader aware of gap and tries to fill it -> reader only realizes later gap needs to be closed
Metaphors as intersection between the visual and the narrative
What are semiotic spaces?
Lotmar Yuri, Semiotic space
Semiotic: study of signs and symbols
Play central role in communicating and meaning making
Cultural systems composed of various levels of semiotic space
Semiotic space: environment in which signs and cultural meanings are produced
Physical + conceptual dimensions (language, art, rituals as forms of human expression)
Dynamic and constantly evolving, shaped by interactions between humans and cultural surroundings
Boundaries:
create a sense of order, defining and separating different cultural systems
Allow exchange of meaning across cultural borders
Influence formation of cultural identities
Outside semiosphere neither language nor communication
What is semiotic memory (Lotmar Yuri)?
Semiotic memory: accumulation and preservation of cultural information over time
Myths, language, traditions
What does the semiotic system depend on?
Binarism: meaning is organized and structured in terms of binary opposition of contrasting elements -> meaning by difference
Asymmetry: unequal distribution/imbalance of meanings withing semiotic system -> certain elements or signs carry more significance or power than other
symmetry often shaped by cultural norms, social hierarchies etc.
Some meanings/symbols privileged and dominant, others marginalized or subordinate
Hierarchy of meaning constantly changing
Hierarchy in space?
Subjectivity defined against the other
How is language related to Lacans Psychoanalysis?
Metonomy -> displacement (representation of severla people in single image)
Metaphor = condensation (substituting one person with another in dream)
When a child passes mirror stage it enters the symbolic (language system) and begins to communicate with others
Process marked by lack, separation, prohibition and restrain
What is characteristic of the uncanny?
Develops in the direction of ambivalence until it finally coincides with its opposite (unheimlich)
Something which is familiar and old established in the mind and which has become alienated from it only through the process of repression
Interesting: characters (of a literary work) are person-like?
What does Lacan mean when he talks about “Extimité”?
Innermost thoughts and desires are never completely hidden, can be made visible by others through communication and social interaction
When inner coincides with the exterior it becomes threatening, provoking horror and
anxiety
The double: appears in every shape and every degree of development
Which deconstruction steps of post-structuralism exist?
Verbal Stage: similar to conventional forms of reading
Looking for paradoxes and contradictions
Reversing orders
Textual stage: takes look at overall text, breaks in time, space, form, tone, vocabulary
Linguistic stage: language calling self into question -> saying something is unsayable etc.
What is mimesis vs. diagesis?
Diegesis: poet himself speaker, does not even attempt to sugges that anyone but himself is speaking
Indirect speech
Abstracted succession of events/abstraction
Mimesis: poet tries to create illusion that it is not he who speaks
Dialogue, monologue, direct speech
Capacity of literature to represent/imitate reality
Free indirect discourse (showing and telling) (equally mimetic and diegetic)
Brings into play plurality of speakers and attitudes
Can assist reader in reconstructing the implied authors attitude toward the characters involved (ironic/empathetic)
Co existence of various voices creates intra-textual polyphony (style of simultaneously combining a number of parts each foring individual harmony as well as harmonizing with each other withing THE/ONE text)
The preservation of the linguistic register of the speaker creates inter-textual polyphony (harmony among many texts)
What different kinds of intertextuality exist?
Intertext: quotation of other text within text
Paratext: everything but the proper text
Metatext: commentary/criticism about text
Hypertext:: text deriving from other text (hypotext), not commetary
Achitext/transtext: literariness, larger textual context/history from which text emerges
What is characteristic of theatre?
Limitation of mimesis hightens artificiality and functionality of characters as well as setting
Drama as a synaesthetic text (supersign) (verbal, linguistic and acoustic codes)
Explicit figural characterization: actuality and facticity of speech
Implicit figural characterization: language used, performativity, costume
Implicit authorial characterization: juxtaposition of characters within space
Over the body of dramatic characters cultural values, morals and argument and socio-political norms are negotiated
What are heterotopias (Foucault)?
Real spaces, opposite of utopias and dystopias (unreal spaces)
Spaces/places that exist in society but operate outside of the usual norms and functions
Have own rules, meanings, and functions
Examples: gardens, cemeteries, museums, libraries, brothels, ships
Multiple purposes
Challenging societal norms
Spaces for crisis and deviation
Otherness utopias
Dual nature
Mirror dominant societal order
Reflects and embodies its values, norms, power structures
Contain objects that are recognizable or familiar to society
BUT reflection is nor a replication -> rearranges those orders
Creation of space both familiar and strange
Contest dominant societal order
Spaces of resistance, critique, imagination
Alternative temporalities: places of memory like museums, utopian spaces of alternative futures
Heterochronie, i.e. the cemetery as a time of remembrance instead
of living in the present
How are heterochronies and heterotopias connected?
Heterotopias are capable of juxtaposing in a single place several spaces (that are inthemselves incompatible) i.e. film, theatre
Heterotopias and heterochronies -> often linked to spaces in time
Not always accessible
Heterochronic
Used for specific events
Always presuppose a system of opening and closing that both isolates them and makes them penetrable
What is the use of dialogue (compared to monologues)?
create conflict
What kinds of poetry exist?
Lyric poetry: short poem in voice of single speaker
Epic poetry: long narrative poem, heroic topics, supernatural forces
Dramatic poetry = poetic monologies or dialogues performed by a character
What elements of rhymes exist?
Masculines rhyme: single stressed syllable -tree, -free
Féminines rhyme : stresses syllable followed by unstressed syllable (-twenty, -plenty)
Perfect rhyme: syllablels and sound match harmoniously – tree – free
Iperfect rhyme: employ assonance and consonance but with absence of harmony (loads, lids, lads)
Eye-rhyme
Apostrophe: speech directed to an object or being which cannot respond
Synecdoche: a part of something used for everything (eyes for humans) (shift of meaning)
Metonymy: something associated with something is used for everything (“White House” for the president) (shift of meaning)
Transfer or meaning
Allegory
Metaphor
Simile
Symbol
Motiv -> repeated symbol
What is a syncope?
omission if part of a word or sentece
What is it called when human feelings and conduct are ascribed to nature?
pathetic fallacy
What is it called when a word is repeated without a single word between the repetition?
epizeuxis
What is the repetition at the beginning of a phrase called?
Anaphora
What is it called when two or more clauses are related to each other through a reversal of structures in order to make a larger point?
Chiasmus
What do you call a consonance with the letter s?
Sibilance
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