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NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory

NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

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Page 1: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

NARRATOLOGY

Critical Theory

Page 2: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Narratology: what is it?!

• The study of narrative structures

• How narratives make meaning

• What the basic mechanisms and procedures are which are common to all acts of story-telling.

Page 3: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

What Narratology is NOT!

• Not the reading and interpretation of individual stories

• BUT

• The attempt to study the nature of ‘story’ itself, as a CONCEPT and as a CULTURAL PRACTICE.

Page 4: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘STORY’ versus ‘PLOT’

• The ‘story’ is the actual sequence of events as they happen

• The ‘plot’ is those events as they are edited, ordered, packaged, and presented in what we recognise as a narrative.

Page 5: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘Story’

• The ‘story’, being the events as they happen, has to begin at the beginning, of course, and then move chronologically with nothing left out.

Page 6: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The ‘Plot’

• The ‘plot’, on the other hand, may well begin somewhere in the middle of a chain of events, and may then backtrack, with a flashback which fills us in on things that happened earlier

• Plot may have elements which flash forward, hinting at events which will happen later / foreshadowing

• So, the plot is a version of the story which should not be taken literally.

Page 7: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

But remember:

It is the whole packaging of the narrative which creates the overall effect.

Style + viewpoint + structure + pace + characterisation + techniques etc = the

narrative

Page 8: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

A Short History of Narratology!

•Aristotle

•Vladimir Propp

•Gerard Genette

Page 10: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Aristotle’s Three Key Elements in a Plot

• 1. The Hamartia

• ‘Sin’ or ‘Fault’

• In tragic drama = tragic flaw

• 2. The Anagnorisis

• ‘recognition’ or ‘realisation’

• When the truth of the situation is recognised by the protagonist

Page 11: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Aristotle’s Three Key Elements in a Plot…

• 3. The Peripeteia• A ‘turn-round’ or a ‘reversal’ of fortune• In classic tragedy this is usually a fall from

high to low estate, as the hero falls from greatness

• ** Categories essentially to do with moral purposes of the stories

• ** However, these three elements may not suit all narratives.

Page 12: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Vladimir Propp (1895-1970)

• Russian Formalist critic; Russian folktales

• Morphology = the study of forms

• His work is based on the notion that all tales are constructed by selecting items from a basic repertoire of 31 ‘functions’ (all possible actions)

Page 13: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Some of these functions:

• One of the members of a family absents himself from home

• The villain receives information about his victim

• The hero leaves home

• The hero is tested, interrogated, attacked etc which prepares his way for receiving either a magical agent or helper

Page 14: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

• Hero and villain join in direct combat• The hero is branded• The villain is defeated• The hero returns• The hero is pursued• A false hero presents unfounded claims• The hero is married and ascends the throne.• etc

Page 15: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Propp’s 7 ‘Spheres of Action’

• 1. The villain• 2. The Donor (provider)• 3. The Helper• 4. The Princess (a sought-for-person) and

her father• 5. The Dispatcher• 6. The Hero (seeker or victim)• 7. The False Hero

Page 16: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Propps’ ‘Recipe’ for a Story

• Take items from the ‘Functions’

and

• Combine them with

• ‘roles’

• from the

• ‘Spheres of Action’!

Page 17: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Gerrard Genette

• Focus: how the tale is told

• The Process of telling the tale itself

• 6 key areas:

Page 18: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

1. Is the basic narrative ‘mimetic’ or ‘diegetic’?

• Mimesis

• = showing or dramatising; represented in a scenic way; setting, dialogue/ direct speech

• = slow telling, what is done and said is ‘staged’ for the reader, creating the illusion that we are ‘seeing’ and ‘hearing’ things for ourselves.

Page 19: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

• Diegesis• = ‘telling’ or ‘relating’• = more rapid or panoramic or summarising way• = gives us the essential information as efficiently

as possible, without creating the illusion that the events are taking place before our eyes.

• ** In reality, writers use the two modes in tandem for strategic reasons.

Page 20: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

2. Focalisation

• Viewpoint or perspective

• Which point of view the story is told

• External focalisation = viewpoint outside the character depicted; we are told things only external and observable; what the characters say and do

• Internal focalisation = focus on what the characters think and feel

Page 21: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Focalisation…

• ‘ Thelma stood up and called out to Mario’

= EXTERNAL FOCALISATION

• ‘Thelma suddenly felt anxious that Mario was not going to see her and would walk by oblivious to where she was standing’

= INTERNAL FOCALISATION

Page 22: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Focalisation…

• Zero Focalisation

• Novelist may freely enter minds and emotions of more than one character, as if privy to the thoughts and feelings of all of them.

• Characteristic of ‘traditional’ or ‘classical’ narration

• Also named ‘omniscient narration’

Page 23: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

3. Who is telling the story?

Page 24: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The Unidentified Narrator

• A voice; tone; an intelligent recording consciousness;

• The covert, effaced, non-intrusive, non-dramatised

• May not be the author’s true voice

• Disembodied narrator

• Authorial persona

Page 25: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The Identified Narrator

• A distinct, named character

• Has a personal history, gender, social-class position, distinct likes and dislikes etc

• Have witnessed, or learned about, or even participated in the events they tell

• ‘Overt’ or ‘dramatised’ or ‘intrusive narrators’

Page 26: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The Identified Narrator…

• Either:

** Heterodiegetic Narrator

= not a character in the story he/she narrates but an outsider to it eg Mr. Lockwood in Wuthering Heights

** Homodiegetic Narrator

= present as a character in the story eg. Jane Eyre, Steven Messenger

Page 27: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The Unreliable Narrator

• Narrator may be unreliable as they are:

- biased; prejudiced; cynical; puzzled; misleading

- May have disturbed vision of events

- E.G. Steven Messenger

Page 28: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The Effect of the Unreliable Narrator

- may be alienating and disjointed for the reader

- reader as active participant

- reader must decode for themselves

- a refracted picture of events is portrayed

Page 29: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

How is time handled in a story?

• Narratives often contain references back and references forward so that the order of telling does not correspond to the order of happening.

• ‘Analeptic’ = Flash back

• ‘Proleptic’ = Flash forward

Page 30: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

What do good writers do?

• Make strategic use of both analepsis and prolepsis in a story for the beginning is seldom the best place to start.

• Stories tend to begin in the middle = ‘in medias res’

Page 31: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Basic narrative momentum generated and readers engaged

by:• starting in the middle

with

• analeptic material sketching out what went before

and

• proleptic devices hinting at what the outcome will be.

Page 32: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

How is the story ‘packaged’?

Stories are not always presented ‘straight’ or ‘linear’

Page 33: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘Frame Narratives’ or ‘Primary Narratives’

• Contain within them ‘embedded’ narratives or ‘secondary narratives’

• Use of a ‘framing device’• Also known as the ‘meta-narrative’ or ‘tales

within tales’• Eg. ‘The Turn of the Screw’, ‘Twelfth Night’• NB: Primary narrative just means it comes first,

rather than the main narrative, which usually it isn’t / secondary narrative usually the main story.

Page 34: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’?

• SINGLE-ENDED

• Frame situation is not returned to once the embedded narrative is complete

• eg ‘The Turn of the Screw’, at the end, we don’t return to the original group telling the story around the fire.

Page 35: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’?

• DOUBLE-ENDED

• The frame situation is reintroduced at the end of the embedded tales

• Eg ‘Heart of Darkness’, we return, briefly, to the group of listeners to whom Marlow has been telling the tale.

Page 36: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

‘Single-ended’, ‘double-ended’ or ‘intrusive’?

• INTRUSIVE• When the embedded tale is occasionally

interrupted to revert to the frame situation• Eg. ‘Heart of Darkness’, Marlow interrupts

his own telling and talks to the group of men

• Effect can be alienating and disrupting• Conrad did this to show his distaste for

omniscient narration!

Page 38: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Direct and tagged

• ‘What’s your name?’ Mario asked her. ’It’s Thelma’, she replied.

Page 39: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Direct and Untagged

‘What’s your name?’

‘Thelma’

Page 40: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Indirect Speech

• He asked her what her name was, and she told him it was Thelma.

• Effect: formal distancing between reader and events.

Page 41: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Free Indirect Speech

• What was her name? It was Thelma

• Effect: Suits an internally focalised narrative as it seems natural and ‘glides’.

What was her name? It was Thelma. Thelma was it?

Not the kind of name to launch a thousand ships. More of a suburban, lace-curtain sort of name, really.

Page 42: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Narratology as a branch of

STRUCTURALISM

Page 43: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

STRUCTURALISM

• Focus on structure, symbol, design

• Parallels, echoes, reflections, patterns and contrasts

• Narrative becomes highly schematised

Page 44: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

We look for the factors on the left and expect to find them in the parts of the tale listed on the right.

• Parallels• Echoes• Reflections /

Repetitions in• Contrasts • Patterns

• Plot• Structure• Character / Motive• Situation /

Circumstance• Language / Imagery

Page 45: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

How does this apply to ‘Strange Objects’?

Page 46: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

The thesis of Structuralism:

• That narrative structures are founded upon underlying paired opposites, or dyads

• These contrasts are the skeletal structure on which all narratives are fleshed out.

Page 47: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure

• The tale may have a binary structure (a structure of paired opposites) made up of two contrasting halves

• ‘Strange Objects’- What are the two structural halves? What is the ‘framing narrative’?

= Steven Messenger’s first-person diary entries and the ‘contrasting half’ is the other material: Wouter Loos’ journal entries; police reports; advertisements; letters etc

Page 48: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure

• Marked difference in narrative pace between the narrative halves:

- Messenger’s narrative: moves with increasingly disjointed rapidity, reflecting his fractured sense of self; psychosis

- ‘Other’ narrative half: ordered text types; range of perspectives; methodical

Page 49: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Binary Opposition- Narrative Structure

• Consider how each narrative half effects the other; what is the relationship between the two; distribution of power

Page 50: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Binary Opposition within the character of Steven Messenger

• Consider contrasts and parallels between SM’s ‘two halves’ / his alter-ego / the ‘Other’

Page 51: NARRATOLOGY Critical Theory. Narratology: what is it?! The study of narrative structures How narratives make meaning What the basic mechanisms and procedures

Other Binary Opposites to consider:

• Life• Male• Light • Doing• Reality

• Art• Female• Dark• Looking• Representation