Narrative theory / Kent Puckett.
Material type:
- 9781107033665 (hardback)
- 9781107684744 (paperback)
- 808
- PN 212 P977n 2016
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Biblioteca Juan Bosch | Humanidades | Humanidades (4to. Piso) | PN 212 P977n 2016 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 3 | Available | 00000117894 |
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PN 212 L521s 2015 Steering the craft : a twenty-first century guide to sailing the sea of story / | PN 212 M538r 2003 Retorica, comunicación y realidad : la construcción retorica de las batallas en las cronicas de la conquista / | PN 212 P314n 2009 Le narrateur : introduction áa la theorie narrative / | PN 212 P977n 2016 Narrative theory / | PN 212 S161n 2006 Narrar y aprender historia / | PN 218 C532w 1998 Writing dialogue / | PN 218 D263w 2003 Writing dialogue for scripts / |
"Kent Puckett's Narrative Theory provides anaccount of a methodology increasingly central to literary studies, film studies, history, psychology and beyond. In addition to introducing readers to some of the field's major figures and their ideas, Puckett situates critical and philosophical approaches towards narrative within a longer intellectual history. The book reveals one of narrative theory's founding claims - that narratives need to be understood in terms of a formal relation between story and discourse, between what they narrate and how they narrate it - both as a necessary methodological distinction and as a problem characteristic of modern thought. Puckett thus shows that narrative theory is not only a powerful descriptive system but also a complex and sometimes ironic form of critique. Narrative Theory offers readers an introduction to the field's key figures, methods, and ideas and also reveals that field as unexpectedly central to the history of ideas"-- Provided by publisher.
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction: story/discourse; 2. Action, event, conflict: the uses of narrative in Aristotle and Hegel; 2.1. Beginning, middle, and end: Aristotle and narrative; 2.2. Tragedy, comedy, and the cunning of reason: Hegel and narrative theory; 3. Lost illusions: narrative in Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud; 3.1. First as tragedy: Karl Marx, narrative, and revolution; 3.2. Beyond story and discourse: Friedrich Nietzsche and the limits of narrative; 3.3. Narrative and its discontents: Sigmund Freud's story; 4. Epic, novel, narrative theory; 4.1. Relations stop nowhere: Henry James and the novel's narrative; 4.2. Starry maps: Georg Lukacs and the comparative analysis of narrative genres; 4.3. To kill is not to refute: Mikhail Bakhtin on genre, narrative, and history; 4.4. History's scar: Erich Auerbach and narrative thinking; 5. Form, structure, narrative; 5.1. The hero leaves home: Vladimir Propp and narrative morphology; 5.2. Knight's move: Viktor Shklovsky and Russian Formalism; 5.3. Differences without positive terms: Ferdinand de Saussure and the Structuralist turn; 5.4. The elementary structures of story and discourse: Claude Levi-Strauss and the narrative analysis of myth; 6. Narratology and narrative theory: Kristeva, Barthes, and Genette; 6.1. It is what it isn't: Julia Kristeva and Tel Quel; 6.2. Parisian gold: Roland Barthes and narrative pleasure; 6.3. The knowable is at the heart of the mysterious: Genette's narrative poetics.
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