Local Fictionality within Global Nonfiction: Roz Chast's Can't We Talk about Something More Pleasant?

Autori

  • Jim Phelan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.13130/2037-2426/7473

Parole chiave:

Fictionality, fiction/non-fiction, rhetoric, audience, graphic narrative, Roz Chast

Abstract

This essay deploys a rhetorical approach to fictionality (defined as intentionally signaled communication in narrative) in order to analyze Roz Chast’s various uses of local fictionality within her graphic memoir about her parents’ end-of-life experiences. In so doing, it extends the contribution Chast’s memoir makes to the understanding of the many facets of end-of-life experiences for patients and their families by unpacking significant details of her exploration of her own experiences. The essay also contributes to conversations about the fiction/nonfiction distinction by (a) highlighting the presence of the narrative audience in fiction and its absence in local uses of fictionality in global nonfiction and (b) showing that the presence of local fictionality can enhance an author’s communication about actual events. Finally, the essay offers a preliminary and partial taxonomy of fictionality within the genre of graphic narrative.

Riferimenti bibliografici

Chast, Roz. Can’t We Talk about Something More Pleasant? New York: Bloomsbury, 2014. Print.

Cohn, Dorrit. The Distinction of Fiction. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1998. Print.

Nielsen, Henrik Skov, James Phelan, and Richard Walsh. “Ten Theses about Fictionality.” Narrative 23.1 (2015): 61-73. Print.

Nielsen, Henrik Skov and Simon Zetterberg Gjerlevsen. “Distinguishing Fictionality.” Cindie Maagard, Marianne Wolff Lundholt, and Daniel Schäbler, eds. Fictionality and Factuality: Blurred Borders in Narrations of Identity. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter (forthcoming). Print.

Phelan, James. Narrative as Rhetoric. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1996. Print.

---. Somebody Telling Somebody Else: Toward a Rhetorical Poetics of Narrative. Columbus; Ohio State University Press (forthcoming). Print.

Pubblicato

29-12-2016

Come citare

Phelan, J. (2016). Local Fictionality within Global Nonfiction: Roz Chast’s Can’t We Talk about Something More Pleasant?. ENTHYMEMA, (16), 18–31. https://doi.org/10.13130/2037-2426/7473

Fascicolo

Sezione

Narrative and Medicine
Ricevuto 2016-08-12
Accettato 2016-12-22
Pubblicato 2016-12-29