Reading beyond the code : literature and relevance theory
著者
書誌事項
Reading beyond the code : literature and relevance theory
Oxford University Press, 2020
- pbk.
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注記
Originally published: 2018
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book explores the value for literary studies of the model of communication known as relevance theory. Drawing on a wide range of examples-lyric poems by Yeats, Herrick, Heaney, Dickinson, and Mary Oliver, novels by Cervantes, Flaubert, Mark Twain, and Edith Wharton-nine of the ten essays are written by literary specialists and use relevance theory both as a broad framing perspective and as a resource for detailed analysis. The final essay, by Deirdre
Wilson, co-founder (with Dan Sperber) of relevance theory, takes a retrospective view of the issues addressed by the volume and considers the implications of literary studies for cognitive approaches to communication. Relevance theory, described by Alastair Fowler as 'nothing less than the makings of a
radically new theory of communication, the first since Aristotle's', offers a comprehensive pragmatics of language and communication grounded in evidence about the ways humans think and behave. While designed to capture the everyday murmur of conversation, gossip, peace-making, hate speech, love speech, 'body-language', and the chatter of the internet, it covers the whole spectrum of human modes of communication, including literature in the broadest sense as a characteristically human activity.
Reading Beyond the Code is unique in using relevance theory as a prime resource for literary study, and it is also the first to claim that the model works best for literature when understood in the light of a broader cognitive approach, focusing on a range of phenomena that support an 'embodied' conception of cognition and language. This broadened perspective serves to enhance the value for literary studies of the central claim of relevance theory, that the 'code model' is
fundamentally inadequate to account for human communication, and in particular for the modes of communication that are proper to literature.
目次
Terence Cave and Deirdre Wilson: Introduction
1: Elleke Boehmer: The Mind in Motion: A Cognitive Reading of W.B. Yeats's 'Long-legged Fly'
2: Raphael Lyne: Relevance Across History
3: Guillemette Bolens: Relevance Theory and Kinesic Analysis in Don Quixote and Madame Bovary
4: Neil Kenny: Relevance Theory and the Effect of Literature on Beliefs: The Example of Injun Joe in Twain's Adventures of Tom Sawyer
5: Kirsti Sellevold: On the Borders of the Ostensive: Blushing in Edith Wharton's The House of Mirth
6: Wes Williams: Invisible guests': Shared Contexts, Inference, and Poetic Truth in Heaney's 'Album V'
7: Kathryn Banks: Look again', 'Listen, listen', 'Keep looking': Emergent Properties and Sensorimotor Imagining in Mary Oliver's Poetry
8: Timothy Chesters: The Lingering of the Literal in Some Poems of Emily Dickinson
9: Terence Cave: Towards a Passing Theory of Literary Understanding
10: Deirdre Wilson: Relevance Theory and Literary Interpretation
Bibliography of Works Cited
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