1 / 22

METHODOLOGIE 1.2

METHODOLOGIE 1.2. September 7, 2010 o.m.heynders@uvt.nl. Leren begrijpen van narrativiteit als universeel gegeven. De relevantie van een instrumentarium bij de beantwoording van een onderzoeksvraag. The universality of narrative. Narrative is something we all engage in.

sierra-roth
Télécharger la présentation

METHODOLOGIE 1.2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. METHODOLOGIE 1.2 September 7, 2010 o.m.heynders@uvt.nl

  2. Leren begrijpen van narrativiteit als universeel gegeven. • De relevantie van een instrumentarium bij de beantwoording van een onderzoeksvraag

  3. The universality of narrative • Narrative is something we all engage in. • We construct narratives many times a day. • Narrative is thé distinctive human trait. • Narrative capability shows up in infants in their 3 or 4th year, from that point on memory is present.

  4. Roland Barthes, authority on narrative / myth / semiosis The narratives of the world are numberless. Narrative is first and foremost a extraordinary variety of genres, themselves distributed amongst different substances – as though any material were fit to receive man’s stories. Able to be carried by articulated language, spoken or written, fixed or in moving images, gestures, and the ordered mixture of all these substances; narrative is present in myth, legend, fable, tale, novella, epic, history, tragedy, drama, comedy, mime, painting, stained-glass windows, cinema, comics, news-items, conversation.

  5. Narrative is present in every age, every class, every place, culture and society. Combination of nature(in our genes just like grammar) and nurture(intertextuality). This is a painting, and a story. We can read this painting as a narrative.

  6. Some introductory concepts and definitions • Narrative is the principal way in which our species organizes its understanding of space and time. • Clock time Narrative time, details added, sequences disturbed or slowed down, complexity

  7. J.M. Coetzee, South-African novelist • For the reader, the experience of time bunching and becoming dense at points of significant action in the story, or thinning out and skipping or glancing through nonsignificant periods of clock time or calendar time, can be exhilarating – in fact it may be at the heart of narrative pleasure. As for writing and the experience of writing, there is a definite thrill of mastery – perhaps even omnipotence – that comes with making time bend and buckle, and generally with being present when signification takes control over time.

  8. Narrative is the representation of an event or a series of events. • Event = action (there are actors involved) • Continuity and coherence • Narrative requires a narrator-position (actor / camera / eye of the painter / eye of the reader) • Narrative = a double temporal logic: duration of the sequence of events and duration of the presentation of the text / film / play

  9. Important notions • Story • Fabel • Narrative discourse • Sujet • Plot

  10. Life in spite of Everything:the Art of Narrative • 14 stories • 14 narrators / actors in a play • Narrative on life: message is that life goes on, that humans ‘have to live’

  11. Narrative studies / Narratology • M. Bahktin, V. Shlovsky [Russian Formalism] • F. Stanzel, Wolfgang Iser [German Rezeptions ästhetik] • Claude Bremond, Gerard Genette, A.J. Greimas, Roland Barthes [French structuralism] • Mieke Bal [Holland, UvA], Bart Vervaeck [Belgium, Ghent] • Wayne C. Booth, James McPhelan, Brian McHale [USA]

  12. Narratiede complexiteit van verhalen vertellenInterpretatiede complexiteit vanbetekenis toekennenElementen in een verhalende tekst zijn deels objectiveerbaar en moeten geinterpreteerd worden (P. Ricoeur) • Presentatie (direct aanwezig stellen) en representatie (vertellen bij monde van identificeerbare spreker) • Referentie en autonomie

  13. Porter Abbott 6, 7, 8Most important notions/ ideas Instruments: • Narrator • Focalization • Voice • Distance • Implied author • Monoloque intérieur • Stream of consciousness • Gap • Closure • Crux Reflection on Interpretation: • Analysis • Evaluation/judgment • Understanding • Explanation • Intentional reading • Underreading • Overreading

  14. Stream of consciousness (William James): continual stream of thoughts and associations, without rational order. (indirect style ) • Interior monologue: flow of feelings of one person (direct style, immediate evocation without reflection of ordening)

  15. Subtle differences • Real author – narrator – character / focalization • Implied author – message --- intention • Interpretation – comprehension – explanation (verstehen und erklären: Dilthey and Ricoeur) Hermeneutics = The tradition of text exegesis Whole and part / part and whole

  16. 3 Reading strategies • Intentional reading Intention= purpose / meaning / plan Author is in charge, responsible • Symptomatic reading Context / frame / paratext / deconstruction • Adaptive reading Intertextuality / modification Main problem: legitimacy of the interpretation Finding evidence in text Convincing other readers

  17. Text and World There is no discourse so fictional that it does not connect up with reality. But such discourse refers to another level, more fundamental than that attained by the descriptive, constative, didactic discourse we call ordinary language. My thesis here is that the abolition of a first order reference , an abolition effected by fiction and poetry, is the condition of possibility for the freeing of a second order reference, which reaches the world not only at the level of manipulable objects, but at the level that Husserl designated by the expression Lebenswelt and Heidegger by the expression ‘being-in-the-world’ . The unique referential dimension of the work of fiction and poetry raises the most fundamental hermeneutical problem. (141) Paul Ricoeur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences, 1981 Text = written discourse

  18. SCHEPPINGSVERHAALJ. Slauerhoff Gods kind had blokken in zijn boezelaar,Waarmee het in de wolken had gespeeld.Maar toen zij op wou bergen, moe, verveeld,Zag ze in de doos en wist niet hoe ze daarIn passen moesten, keurig ingedeeld.Want God was streng, maar sliep – dus geen gevaar.Zij liet ze vallen, zag er niet meer naarOm en ging vlug naar een mooi engelbeeld.De blokken vielen door een leeg heelalEn kwamen op een leege wereld, waarZe bleven zooals ze er heen geworpen.De meeste sprongen stuk tot berg en dal;En die heel bleven vormden hier en daarDe groote steden en de kleine dorpen.

  19. Life in spite of everything How can we use the narrative devices? • Narration / voice / distance • Themes / motifs • Repetition • Dialogues / free direct speech • Implied author Overreading + Underreading ?

  20. Characters • Each character in the documentary takes part in real life, but can also be identified as type: there is the student, the actress, the boxer, the artist, the housewife, the fisherman, the ambulance driver, the Kung Fu teacher, the farmer, and the man from the grocery shop who dreams of becoming mayor. • We meet both flat and round characters: the flat ones are stable in their behaviour and ideas; round characters are those that develop and that can surprise us in the ambiguity of normality. 14 characters = narrators Reliability ? 2 cities = historical reality

  21. Development of character • Round character is hairdresser Yafa Malka in Sderot: at first sight, a naive and sensation-seeking person, the typical blonde. She becomes more interesting when she shows us her comfortable house, including, quite surprisingly, the shelter room beneath it. This woman is ambitious and adores her grown-up soldier son. She is smart in misleading her neighbour when he is counting on her vote, and she performs the role of the perfect heroine when she defends an Arab toy seller who is being abused by an Israeli passer-by. Ambiguity Gaps Closure Cruxes

  22. Splitscreen • Viewers compose their own version of the story on the basis of the split-screen-divided material. The split screen is at once a scar and a hyphen. Never can we escape the impression that the two worlds are separated and linked, doomed to be connected. • Wanneer lezen we de tekst en welke verschillen ontstaan tussen 2008 en 2010? Intentional, Symptomatic, Adaptive Reading ?

More Related