Sociolinguistic Implications of Narratology: Focalization and ‘Double Deixis’ in Conversational Storytelling


Autoria(s): Mildorf, Jarmila
Contribuinte(s)

Hyvärinen, Matti

Korhonen, Anu

Mykkänen, Juri

Data(s)

2006

Resumo

Over the last few decades, literary narratology has branched out into a wide array of ‘post-classical’ narratologies that have borrowed concepts from cognitive psychology, sociology, anthropology, history, linguistics, and other disciplines. The question arises to what extent ‘classical’ narratological concepts can also be successfully exported to other disciplines which have an interest in narrative. In this article, I apply the concept of ‘focalization’ as well as David Herman’s insights into doubly-deictic ‘you’ in second-person narratives to an interview narrative and further materials from my empirical sociolinguistic study on general practitioners’ narrative discourse on intimate partner abuse. I consider how the narrative positioning of the GP as storyteller and ‘protagonist’ of his story corresponds with his social and professional positioning with regard to his patients in the context of intimate partner violence cases and vis-à-vis the interviewer during the research interview. Focalization and double deixis are shown to become part of a narrative strategy whereby the narrator distances himself from his own personal self in the narrative and at the same time tries to align the interviewer with his viewpoint.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10138/25743

952-10-3019-4

1796 -2986

Idioma(s)

EN

Publicador

Tutkijakollegium

Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies

Forskarkollegiet

Relação

COLLeGIUM: Studies Across Disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Volume 1: The Travelling Concept of Narrative

Direitos

© 2006 author and volume editors

Tipo

article in book