Description

Book Synopsis
Fleischman brings together theory and methodology from various quarters to shed important new light on the linguistic structure of narrative, a primary and universal device for translating our experiences into language.

Trade Review
...Fleischman’s book takes the study of medieval literature to new hermeneutic horizons.... Furthermore, through the use of sociolinguistics she connects the modern and medieval worlds in a way that will make the medieval world less alien to us, and thus her perspective gives us another means by which we can make medieval literature more relevant to our students. * Studies in the Age of Chaucer *

Table of Contents
  • Abbreviations
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Working Definitions and Operational Preliminaries
    • 1.1. Tense
    • 1.2. Aspect
    • 1.3. Situation types
    • 1.4. Grammar, discourse, and the meaning of tense-aspect categories
    • 1.5. Tenses of the past system
    • 1.6. Tenses of the present system
    • 1.7. Tense-aspect in early Romance
  • Chapter 2. A Theory of Tense-Aspect in Narrative Based on Markedness
    • 2.1. The concept of markedness
    • 2.2. Markedness and tense-aspect categories in narrative
  • Chapter 3. “Ungrammatical” Tenses: Background of the Question
    • 3.1. Scope of the phenomenon
    • 3.2. Diegetic and mimetic discourse
    • 3.3. Grammatical “freedom” of the early vernaculars
    • 3.4. Tense alternation as a mark of “literary” écritures
    • 3.5. Prosodic considerations
    • 3.6. Aspectual hypotheses and “situation types”
    • 3.7. The HISTORICAL PRESENT: The “past-more-vivid”
    • 3.8. The NARRATIVE PRESENT, HISTORICAL PRESENT, and PRESENT tense
    • 3.9. Participant tracking
    • 3.10. From oral performance to écriture: Oral residue in written texts
    • 3.11. Performed stories: Medieval and modern, natural and artificial
  • Chapter 4. Narrative Discourse: Typological Considerations
    • 4.1. Verbal representations of experience: Story structure and reality structure
    • 4.2. Differentia specifica of narrative textuality
    • 4.3. Stories, narratives, and other verbalizations of experience
    • 4.4. Narrative fiction
    • 4.5. Modes of discourse: “Storytelling” and “communication”
    • 4.6. Linguistic marks of storytelling
    • 4.7. Tense and aspect as metalinguistic signals of narrative genres
  • Chapter 5. The Linguistic Structure of Narrative
    • Part I. Temporal Structure
      • 5.1. Speaker-now and story-now
      • 5.2. Retrospective discourse and prospective time
      • 5.3. Iconic sequence and the narrative norm
    • Part II. Text Structure
      • 5.4. The global structure of narrative
      • 5.5. Evaluation
      • 5.6. Adapting the natural narrative model to complex narrations
      • 5.7. The clausal structure of narrative
      • 5.8. Conclusion
  • Chapter 6. Textual Functions
    • Part I. Grounding: The “Texture” of the Text
      • 6.1. The foreground-background contrast
      • 6.2. Toward a theory of grounding
      • 6.3. Grounding and parataxis
      • 6.4. Tense-aspect and grounding
      • 6.5. Creating cohesion: The chansons de geste
    • Part II. Boundary Marking: The “Space” of the Text
      • 6.6. Tense switching and the segmentation of narrative texts
    • Part III. Information Blocking: The “Tempo” of the Text
      • 6.7. “Co-subordinate” nexus
      • 6.8. Pacing the discourse
  • Chapter 7. Expressive Functions
    • 7.1. Point of view and focalization
    • 7.2. The Speaker and the experiencer
    • 7.3. Free indirect discourse
    • 7.4. Interior monologue
    • 7.5. Tense, temporality, and focalization
    • 7.6. Time, tense, and memory in Proust
    • 7.7. Point of view and the PERFECT
    • 7.8. Tense-aspect and point of view in natural narration
    • 7.9. Conclusion
  • Chapter 8. Metalinguistic Functions: Storytelling in the PRESENT
    • 8.1. Epic storytelling: Narration without time
    • 8.2. Romancero: The fragmenting of narrative
    • 8.3. The HISTORICAL PRESENT and beyond
    • 8.4. Transformations of narration in the nouveau roman
    • 8.5. PRESENT-tense fiction: Where is it moving?
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix 1. Coding Conventions
  • Appendix 2. Texts
  • Notes
  • References
  • I. Texts Cited
  • II. Critical Works
  • Concept and Name Index
  • Index of Texts Cited

Tense and Narrativity

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    £30.60

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    RRP £34.00 – you save £3.40 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Suzanne Fleischman


      View other formats and editions of Tense and Narrativity by Suzanne Fleischman

      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 01/03/1990
      ISBN13: 9780292737266, 978-0292737266
      ISBN10: 0292737262

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Fleischman brings together theory and methodology from various quarters to shed important new light on the linguistic structure of narrative, a primary and universal device for translating our experiences into language.

      Trade Review
      ...Fleischman’s book takes the study of medieval literature to new hermeneutic horizons.... Furthermore, through the use of sociolinguistics she connects the modern and medieval worlds in a way that will make the medieval world less alien to us, and thus her perspective gives us another means by which we can make medieval literature more relevant to our students. * Studies in the Age of Chaucer *

      Table of Contents
      • Abbreviations
      • Preface
      • Introduction
      • Chapter 1. Working Definitions and Operational Preliminaries
        • 1.1. Tense
        • 1.2. Aspect
        • 1.3. Situation types
        • 1.4. Grammar, discourse, and the meaning of tense-aspect categories
        • 1.5. Tenses of the past system
        • 1.6. Tenses of the present system
        • 1.7. Tense-aspect in early Romance
      • Chapter 2. A Theory of Tense-Aspect in Narrative Based on Markedness
        • 2.1. The concept of markedness
        • 2.2. Markedness and tense-aspect categories in narrative
      • Chapter 3. “Ungrammatical” Tenses: Background of the Question
        • 3.1. Scope of the phenomenon
        • 3.2. Diegetic and mimetic discourse
        • 3.3. Grammatical “freedom” of the early vernaculars
        • 3.4. Tense alternation as a mark of “literary” écritures
        • 3.5. Prosodic considerations
        • 3.6. Aspectual hypotheses and “situation types”
        • 3.7. The HISTORICAL PRESENT: The “past-more-vivid”
        • 3.8. The NARRATIVE PRESENT, HISTORICAL PRESENT, and PRESENT tense
        • 3.9. Participant tracking
        • 3.10. From oral performance to écriture: Oral residue in written texts
        • 3.11. Performed stories: Medieval and modern, natural and artificial
      • Chapter 4. Narrative Discourse: Typological Considerations
        • 4.1. Verbal representations of experience: Story structure and reality structure
        • 4.2. Differentia specifica of narrative textuality
        • 4.3. Stories, narratives, and other verbalizations of experience
        • 4.4. Narrative fiction
        • 4.5. Modes of discourse: “Storytelling” and “communication”
        • 4.6. Linguistic marks of storytelling
        • 4.7. Tense and aspect as metalinguistic signals of narrative genres
      • Chapter 5. The Linguistic Structure of Narrative
        • Part I. Temporal Structure
          • 5.1. Speaker-now and story-now
          • 5.2. Retrospective discourse and prospective time
          • 5.3. Iconic sequence and the narrative norm
        • Part II. Text Structure
          • 5.4. The global structure of narrative
          • 5.5. Evaluation
          • 5.6. Adapting the natural narrative model to complex narrations
          • 5.7. The clausal structure of narrative
          • 5.8. Conclusion
      • Chapter 6. Textual Functions
        • Part I. Grounding: The “Texture” of the Text
          • 6.1. The foreground-background contrast
          • 6.2. Toward a theory of grounding
          • 6.3. Grounding and parataxis
          • 6.4. Tense-aspect and grounding
          • 6.5. Creating cohesion: The chansons de geste
        • Part II. Boundary Marking: The “Space” of the Text
          • 6.6. Tense switching and the segmentation of narrative texts
        • Part III. Information Blocking: The “Tempo” of the Text
          • 6.7. “Co-subordinate” nexus
          • 6.8. Pacing the discourse
      • Chapter 7. Expressive Functions
        • 7.1. Point of view and focalization
        • 7.2. The Speaker and the experiencer
        • 7.3. Free indirect discourse
        • 7.4. Interior monologue
        • 7.5. Tense, temporality, and focalization
        • 7.6. Time, tense, and memory in Proust
        • 7.7. Point of view and the PERFECT
        • 7.8. Tense-aspect and point of view in natural narration
        • 7.9. Conclusion
      • Chapter 8. Metalinguistic Functions: Storytelling in the PRESENT
        • 8.1. Epic storytelling: Narration without time
        • 8.2. Romancero: The fragmenting of narrative
        • 8.3. The HISTORICAL PRESENT and beyond
        • 8.4. Transformations of narration in the nouveau roman
        • 8.5. PRESENT-tense fiction: Where is it moving?
      • Conclusion
      • Appendix 1. Coding Conventions
      • Appendix 2. Texts
      • Notes
      • References
      • I. Texts Cited
      • II. Critical Works
      • Concept and Name Index
      • Index of Texts Cited

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