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D. H. Lawrence and Narrative Viewpoint: Advances in Stylistics

Autor Dr Violeta Sotirova
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 ian 2011
This book is a stylistic study of D. H. Lawrence's presentation of narrative viewpoint.  The focus is mainly on Lawrence's third novel, Sons and Lovers, occupying a crucial position in his oeuvre and judged by critics to be his first mature piece.

While sharing many features typical of nineteenth-century novels, it marks the emergence of a new technique of writing consciousness that functioned as a precursor to the modernist practice of dialogic shifts across viewpoints.  Through a detailed linguistic analysis, Sotirova shows that different characters' viewpoints are not simply juxtaposed in the narrative, but linked in a way that creates dialogic resonances between them.  The dialogic linking is achieved through the use of devices that have parallel functions in conversational discourse - referring expressions, sentence-initial correctives and repetition.  The book uses stylistics to resolve current controversies in narratology and Lawrence criticism.

In approaching the study of narrative viewpoint from the angle of discourse, Sotirova arrives at cutting-edge insights into Lawrence's work.  This book will be required reading for stylisticians, narratologists, literary linguists and literary studies scholars.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781441132628
ISBN-10: 1441132627
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Continuum
Seria Advances in Stylistics

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Outlining the linguistic mechanics of viewpoint shifts and the effects produced by specific indices can provide a model for subsequent analyses of other authors.

Notă biografică

Violeta Sotirova is a Lecturer in Stylistics at the University of Nottingham, UK.

Cuprins

1. Narrative viewpoint: the theoretical debate \ 2. D. H. Lawrence and the novel \ 3. Naming characters \ 4. Connecting characters' viewpoints \ 5. Binding viewpoints through repetition \ 6. Situating dialogicity in the novel \ 7. Conclusion \ Bibliography \ Index

Recenzii

In this valuable study of Lawrence's use of free indirect style in Sons and Lovers (1913), Sotirova (Univ. of Nottingham, UK) brings the insights of linguistics to literary criticism, aiming to augment the critical commonplace that Lawrence is a dialogic writer... Sotirova offers a compelling theory of free indirect style and sensitive readings of Sons and Lovers...Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.
[Sotirova] is a linguist, and her book is primarily a work of linguistics, but it is also informed by a literary intelligence which, as she demonstrates, is not always present in linguistic studies of literature . This book puts linguistics to the service both of literary theory, in providing empirical support for Bakhtin's dialogism, and of criticism, providing objective evidence of what a conscious and subtle master of narrative viewpoint Lawrence was . I warmly recommend it.
This monograph is a salutary and very impressive example of the insight that can be generated by bringing literary studies and literary stylistics into an intelligent and well-informed dialogue and as such should be widely read and considered both for its own strengths as well as an exemplum of what can be achieved through real inter-disciplinary dialogue . To illuminate a writer like Lawrence, when library shelves already groan with the weight of commentary his work has attracted in the last 100 years, is a real achievement. This is a genuinely new and insightful work on a central canonical writer.
Sotirova's eminently readable study, which keeps linguistic jargon to a minimum and offers good explanations of its key terms, is highly recommended for Lawrence scholars and narrative theorists alike. Students interested in Bakthinian concepts such as dialogicity, social heteroglossia and linguistic hybridity will benefit from Sotirova's clear definitions, while the historical survey in chapter two is an excellent introduction to the debate.