Difference between revisions of "Narratology"

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FOCALISATION AND NARRATION

FOCALISATION: WHO SEES?

Position of the focaliser relative to the story:

  • External focalisation vs. Internal focalisation
  • View of the focalised from outside vs. from within

NARRATION: WHO SPEAKS?

Temporal relations between narration and story:

  • 'ulterior narration' [after the events]
  • 'anterior narration' [before the events]
  • 'simultaneous narration' [during the events]
  • 'intercalated narration' [narration and events alternate, e.g. in epistolary novels]

Narrative Levels:

  • extradiegetic level: The level "immediately superior to the first narrative and concerned with its narration".
  • diegetic level: "the events themselves" [diegesis = story]
  • hypodiegetic level: "stories told by fictional characters [...] a second degree narrative"

"The diegetic level is narrated by an extradiegetic narrator, the hypodiegetic level by a diegetic (intradiegetic) one" (p. 92)

Functions of hypodiegetic narratives:

  • Actional function: the hypodiegetic narrative contributes to the development of the plot
  • Explicative function: the hypodiegetic level offers an explanation of the diegetic level
  • Thematic function: the hypodiegetic narrative is in analogy to main narrative

A TYPOLOGY OF NARRATORS

Narrators may be distinguished in the following respects:

By Narrative Level: extradiegetic narrators, intradiegetic narrators, hypo- and hypohypodiegetic narrators.

By the Extent of Participation in the Story: Homodiegetic narrators are involved in the story, heterodiegetic narrators are not.

By their Degree of Perceptibility:

  • Description of setting.
  • Identification of characters.
  • Temporal summary.
  • Definition of character.
  • Reports of what characters did not think or say.
  • Commentary.

By Reliability: Signs of unreliability are:

  • the narrator has limited knowledge;
  • is personally involved;
  • represents a problematic value-scheme.
Source: Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan. Narrative Fiction. Contemporary Poetics. London, New York: Routledge. 1994 [1983]. 71–105.