Language and Verbal Art Revisited: Linguistic Approaches to the Study of LiteratureThis volume, meant for both specialists and non-specialists, will appeal to both the growing number of scholars working in, and students needing to investigate, the field of literary linguistics, or stylistics. Inspired by Ruqaiya Hasan's conviction that, [] in verbal art the role of language is central. Here language is not as clothing to the body; it IS the body (1985/1989: 91), the papers are on a wide variety of aspects of the language-literature connection, and approach it from diverse perspectives and methodological frameworks, including Systemic Functional Linguistics, pragmatics, corpus linguistics, ethnolinguistics, cultural and translation studies. A wide range of literary genres and world literatures are analyzed, including Shakespeare's plays; modern Austrian authors writing in German (e.g., Thomas Bernhard); Perrault's Histoires et contes du temps pass? and their translations by Angela Carter; the Spanish poets of the Generaci'n del '50; Malaysian-Singaporean poets in English; Anglo-American Modernist poets (Frost, Stevens, Pound and Lawrence) and novelists (Woolf and Conrad); a short story by Marina Warner and Turkish-German narrative by Feridun Zamolu; The Gospel of St. John and Harry Potter. Separate introductions to each of the contributions seek to guide above all the non-specialist reader by describing and comparing the frameworks that the volume comprises. A general introduction diachronically traces key moments in the development of the study of the language of literature seen as socio-cultural practice. |
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Seite 50
there must be the rapid momentaneous association of things which meet and
pass , on the forever incalculable journey of creation : everything left with its own
rapid , fluid relationship with the rest of things . ( 1919 : 183 ) What Lawrence is ...
there must be the rapid momentaneous association of things which meet and
pass , on the forever incalculable journey of creation : everything left with its own
rapid , fluid relationship with the rest of things . ( 1919 : 183 ) What Lawrence is ...
Seite 56
The poem construes life , not as rational knowledge and thought would have it ,
but according to intuitively grasped , inhuman , inanimate , if often personified ,
things in motion . Its lexicogrammar and symbolic articulation instantiate this .
The poem construes life , not as rational knowledge and thought would have it ,
but according to intuitively grasped , inhuman , inanimate , if often personified ,
things in motion . Its lexicogrammar and symbolic articulation instantiate this .
Seite 171
Well , if 3 t to go back a little and tell what happened at the garage after we left
there t 4 surprising thing was that it hadn ' t happened before . They were a party
of three 5 ichaelis tried to find out what had happened , but Wilson wouldn ' t say
a ...
Well , if 3 t to go back a little and tell what happened at the garage after we left
there t 4 surprising thing was that it hadn ' t happened before . They were a party
of three 5 ichaelis tried to find out what had happened , but Wilson wouldn ' t say
a ...
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Inhalt
Contents | 1 |
grammatical | 41 |
examples from | 68 |
Urheberrecht | |
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