Social Minds in Drama. Golnaz Shams

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Social Minds in Drama - Golnaz Shams Literary and Cultural Studies, Theory and the (New) Media

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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_728afd11-7c5b-5738-b5e8-5fbb41035996">15 This lack of interpretive potential, resulting from the abstract nature of the classical approach, is also problematic when it comes to the practical application of narratology to narratives. Bal, Jahn and Genette, in Narrative Discourse ([1972] 1980) and Narrative Discourse Revisited ([1983] 1988), address these problems and shortcomings and offer some concepts as solutions. These concepts (which deal with more functional features of narrative in comparison to the stricter forerunners of the theory), such as mode of narration and communication, the temporal structure of narration, and focalisation, helped pave the way for more contemporary postclassical narrative studies.16

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      In order to overcome the problems resulting from the limiting effects of the abstract theory in classical narratology, postclassical narrative studies combine a classical structuralist concern for systematicity with a new interest in ideological, historical, philosophical and cultural contexts. This context-bound nature shifts the focus from a purely descriptive theory to various interpretive disciplines. Since postclassical narrative studies are more concerned with the pragmatic functions of narrative, their emphasis shifts from “how” narrative works to “what” narrative does. Thus the interpretation and reception of the narrative move to the foreground. Postclassical theorists do not regard the strictly structural textual elements of narrator, plot and the narrating process as the most important elements of narrative. Other textual elements (e.g. character, temporal features, space, etc. …) or supplementary features, which are neither ←35 | 36→linked to the discourse nor histoire (e.g. experientiality, reader response, cognitive features, communicational parameters, etc. …) are seen as important, if not more important than those regarded by the structuralist forerunners. Inevitably the definition of narrative changes; it becomes broader, not restricted by a narrator figure, or sequence of events, it more readily embraces different genres, text-types and media that were ignored before, such as poetry, drama, music, dance, film, painting and computer gaming. Furthermore, postclassical narrative studies engage in transgeneric approaches – where more often than not narrative theories are used in genres other than the traditionally accepted novel – and intermedial approaches where narratological concepts are used in media that are not (text-based) literary narratives. One of these important and interesting cross-disciplinary formations has resulted in the advent of cognitive narrative studies, which is the major theoretical framework of this book.

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