Social Minds in Drama. Golnaz Shams
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The diversity of concepts and approaches in this postclassical trend, expanding on or finding fault with its classical precursor, is intriguing. J. Hillis Miller argues that a proper narratological reading or approach is one that will suggest a new, different way of reading.17 Wayne Booth further explores the implications of the implied author and the concept of unreliability paving the ground for a plethora of different texts and readings of not only the classic narrative form but also of different genres, like poetry, and of real-life communication.18 Ansgar Nünning, one of the theorists not convinced by the “implied author” concept, while dealing with instances of unreliability, discusses the idea of cognitive frames that readers bring into their reading in narratives.19 Brian Richardson provides postclassical narratology with many new ideas about a different logic on the sequence of the plot, a different approach to character or time in narrative and focalisation in narratives that have not been considered narrative by the classical theorists. He is one of the theorists who writes most about genres other than the novel, like drama and theatre. Dan Shen’s focus lies in narrative and stylistics, while Richard Walsh’s (2010) is the nature of fiction and how it operates exactly. These are only a few of the theorists and concepts that have been flourishing in the advent of postclassical narratology and I have limited myself to only the literary/linguistic domain. Valuable work has been done on narratology and music, law, psychology, feminism and political discourse to name, again, only a selection.20
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.
Postclassical narrative theories in general and cognitive narrative theory in particular have much to offer when the narrative text to be analysed is a playscript. This is not only due to the fact that they embrace drama as narrative but also to the emphasis they ascribe to the role of the mind and consciousness. Whereas in classical narrative studies the most important feature of a narrative is the plot,21 with the advent of postclassical theories other features of the narrative become equally important. In the case of cognitive narrative theory, the mind and concepts relating to the mind become the defining features of narratives. There are different aspects of the mind in relation to the narrative that become central to cognitive narrative theories: a) narrative as a way of thinking, its importance in life and to the mind; b) the interplay between the mind of the reader and the narrative; c) (the interaction of) the minds of the characters (Ryan 2010: 476). While the different concepts relating to the mind may pertain to the influence the text has on the mind in general or the interplay of the mind and cognition of the reader and text or a preoccupation with the minds of the inhabitants of a storyworld, it is easy to see how characters might easily become important features of the narrative. Since drama is seen as a genre often based on the characters’ speech and action, the benefits a cognitive narrative approach could bring to the analysis of playscripts come as no surprise.
Thus, cognitive narrative theory embraces the relationship of mind (in its diverse connotations) with various dimensions, and different uses various interpretation of stories may offer. This outlook alone invites a plethora of so many ←36 | 37→diverse approaches within the umbrella term cognitive studies. Since these studies focus on how narratives describe mental states in the cultural and social setting, it comes as little surprise that one of the approaches to take on cognitive studies fairly early on was psychology. Cognitive psychologists started working on story grammar and cognitive systems based on studies of structured, script-like mental processes, memories and perception.22 In the field of AI, many theorists have started to gain interest in a cognitive approach as well. The idea of how complex plots and stories were broken down into scripts and frames in order to arrive at an interpretation seems like a very intriguing concept.23 Other fields joined the cognitive train and eventually one could read up on impossible, norm-challenging scenarios focusing on atypical presentations of narrative, known as unnatural narratology,24 and approaches that focus on the spatiotemporal aspect of narrative as the most important concept of narrative.25
Other works that have been done in the field of cognitive studies include the concept of focalisation and perspective in narratives26 and storyworlds, a cognitive reception theory based on the elements of suspense and surprise in a narrative.27 There are empirical studies that are interested in fMRIs (functional MRI) and in how long it actually takes to read a narrative.28 Relevant to my work are all the theorists who started developing approaches dealing with researching the concept of characters in storyworlds; that is, different methods of characterisation. More specific ramifications of this interest would entail studies in techniques used by narrators, by storytellers or by other figures inhabiting storyworlds. One of the major concerns started to become the mental life of these