Cognitive Poetics: Blending Narrative Mental Spaces. Self-Construal and Identity in Short Literary Fiction

Autori

  • Gabriela Tucan West University of Timisoara

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13130/2037-2426/2949

Parole chiave:

Blending, cognitive poetics, character identity, narrative mental spaces, short story

Abstract

The present study seeks to explore some of the major assumptions made by cognitive linguists regarding language in an attempt to see how various language processes can participate in the emergence of literary meaning. Also, this is an attempt to bridge the gap between linguistics and literary studies. For that purpose, linguistic work with a cognitive orientation can open the floor to one highly debatable question in critical literary theory: the question of interpretation. The primary step in order to meet my objectives is the presentation of a model of analysis that investigates the processes of meaning formation in literary texts – the theory of blending seems to be extremely suitable for an account of meaning formation. I believe that my article can profit substantially from the wide array of instruments provided by the blending theory in order to understand the nature of the reader’s mind while reading literary (short) stories. The study of the basic mental operation of blending is motivated by the general relationship of cognitive poetics and narrative theories. To this end, I will be extensively making use of the blending framework in order to address its narrative implications in two of Hemingway’s already canonical short stories – Big Two-Hearted River and Soldier’s Home. What I hope to demonstrate is that the conceptualization of the narrative mental spaces in these two short stories always has counterfactuality available and uses it as a valuable mental resource. Also, I will try to show that conceptual integration/ blending plays a central role in the self-construal of characters’ identity.

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Pubblicato

06-06-2013

Come citare

Tucan, G. (2013). Cognitive Poetics: Blending Narrative Mental Spaces. Self-Construal and Identity in Short Literary Fiction. ENTHYMEMA, (8), 38–55. https://doi.org/10.13130/2037-2426/2949

Fascicolo

Sezione

Cognitive Poetics - A cura di Stefano Calabrese e Stefano Ballerio
Ricevuto 2013-04-30
Accettato 2013-05-15
Pubblicato 2013-06-06