Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W51305014> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 90 of
90
with 100 items per page.
- W51305014 startingPage "168" @default.
- W51305014 abstract "Now, is everywhere. The study of continues to grow more nuanced, capacious, and extensive as it is applied to an ever greater range of fields and disciplines, appearing more prominently in areas from philosophy and law to studies of performance art and hypertexts. Nor is there any end in sight: most important new movement in religious studies is theology, and there is even a new kind of psychological treatment called narrative therapy. Cognitive science offers experimental evidence for a claim that only recently was hyperbolic boast of a practitioner of nouveau roman: that is basic vehicle of human knowledge. Or in words of Mark Turner: imagining-story--is fundamental instrument of thought. [...] It is a literary capacity indispensable to human cognition generally (4-5). In literary, cultural, and performance studies, theory continues to expand, whether in burgeoning field of life writing or in analysis of drama or film. It is no exaggeration to say that last ten years have seen a renaissance in theory and analysis. Feminism, arguably most significant intellectual force of second half of twentieth century, has (as should be expected) utterly and fruitfully transformed theory and analysis in many ways. Virtually every component of or agent in transaction has been subjected to sustained examination, including space, closure, character, narration, reader response, linearity and sequence, and even phenomenon of itself. Some of these reconceptualizations, as Honor Wallace's article in this issue demonstrates, continue to be debated and refined. Broader-based gender criticism and queer studies steadily followed rise of feminism, some results of which are likewise evident in this issue. Though rather less work has appeared from other marginalized or minority perspectives so far, these are certainly areas that can be expected to provide significant contributions in near future. Already, several important studies are available, including work on and race, and in postcolonial studies much attention has been devoted to construction of imperial and national narratives. Other movements in critical theory from Lacanian analysis to nomadology to new historicism have been readily applied to study and have often produced impressive results. Elsewhere in field, a new kind of interdisciplinarity is quietly emerging, as developments in artificial-intelligence theory, hypertext studies, concept of possible worlds in analytical philosophy, and advances in cognitive science are applied to theory. Narrative thus seems to be a kind of vortex around which other discourses orbit in ever closer proximity. Another interesting development is represented by work of a number of younger scholars who retain analytical rigor of traditional or classical approaches while moving far beyond relatively limited theoretical parameters of structuralism to address new questions posed by postmodern texts and positionalities. These theorists (including Ruth Ronen, Tamar Yacobi, Brian McHale, Monika Fludernik, Emma Kafalenos, and Patrick O'Neill) have produced a number of groundbreaking studies that are necessitating a radical rethinking of concepts that hitherto have been foundational to theory: distinction between fabula and syuzhet, nature of time, concept of plot, notion of voice, and concept of the reader. They have applied analytical methods to irreverent postmodern practices and formulated a number of original positions. Though I suspect that some will reject name (and perhaps company) I am constructing for them, I will nevertheless refer to these works as gesturing toward a Postmodern Narratology. What is Narrative? Currently, four basic approaches to definition of are in use; we may designate these as temporal, causal, minimal, and transactional. …" @default.
- W51305014 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W51305014 creator A5010885533 @default.
- W51305014 date "2000-06-22" @default.
- W51305014 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W51305014 title "Recent Concepts of Narrative and the Narratives of Narrative Theory" @default.
- W51305014 cites W1521676125 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2034854192 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2041997754 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2044167911 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2055421862 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2089210103 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2232478089 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2318310113 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2321755253 @default.
- W51305014 cites W2796574290 @default.
- W51305014 hasPublicationYear "2000" @default.
- W51305014 type Work @default.
- W51305014 sameAs 51305014 @default.
- W51305014 citedByCount "36" @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142012 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142013 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142015 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142016 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142017 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142018 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142019 @default.
- W51305014 countsByYear W513050142021 @default.
- W51305014 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W51305014 hasAuthorship W51305014A5010885533 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C107993555 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C142932270 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C199033989 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C2777688943 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C2778757428 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C523419034 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W51305014 hasConcept C98369314 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C107038049 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C107993555 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C111472728 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C124952713 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C138885662 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C142362112 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C142932270 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C144024400 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C166957645 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C199033989 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C2777688943 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C2778757428 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C523419034 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C95457728 @default.
- W51305014 hasConceptScore W51305014C98369314 @default.
- W51305014 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W51305014 hasLocation W513050141 @default.
- W51305014 hasOpenAccess W51305014 @default.
- W51305014 hasPrimaryLocation W513050141 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1513027169 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1525331590 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1525376619 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1573837287 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1619847424 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1729310130 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1751769270 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W1798429093 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2000477125 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2006342812 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2022778969 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2045970910 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2071046791 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2088513972 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2089210103 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2093882891 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2182015930 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2325274344 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W2329040514 @default.
- W51305014 hasRelatedWork W567304792 @default.
- W51305014 hasVolume "34" @default.
- W51305014 isParatext "false" @default.
- W51305014 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W51305014 magId "51305014" @default.
- W51305014 workType "article" @default.