Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway

The aim of a cognitive narratology, as I see it, is to develop the literary and generally semiotic study of narratives through cognitive modeling, and to develop cognitive studies of mind and meaning by integrating insights from literary scholarship. In this article, I first examine the concept of n...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Per Aage Brandt
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Récits Cultures Et Sociétés 2015-10-01
Series:Cahiers de Narratologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/narratologie/7291
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850166772966096896
author Per Aage Brandt
author_facet Per Aage Brandt
author_sort Per Aage Brandt
collection DOAJ
description The aim of a cognitive narratology, as I see it, is to develop the literary and generally semiotic study of narratives through cognitive modeling, and to develop cognitive studies of mind and meaning by integrating insights from literary scholarship. In this article, I first examine the concept of narrative discourse (versus descriptive and argumentative discourse) ; second, I discuss the principles for distinguishing narrative subgenres (realistic, fantastic, marvelous, grotesque, absurd stories) ; and third, I propose a model of the constitutive architecture of narrative meaning as manifested by « good stories », stories that make sense by conveying a view of the human condition.In order to develop and test the model, I analyze a selection of acknowledged literary masterpieces : three short stories by Guy de Maupassant (Deux amis, La ficelle, La parure), two by Jorge Luis Borges (Emma Zunz, La otra muerte – The other death), one by Ernest Hemingway (A very short story). Through these analyses, including succinct literary interpretations of the texts, a new view of narrative dynamics is outlined. Agents operate in spaces that have specific dynamic properties, in that they display characteristic forces determining acts and events. There is, I postulate, a canonical set of narrative spaces, each encompassing and contributing a significant part of the meaning of a story. The model distinguishes four such spaces, which are typically also staged as distinct locations ; an initial conditioning space, a catastrophic space, a consequence space, and a conclusion space.Forces are described as causal or intentional. The causal forces are either trivial (habitual, regular, default, whether physical or social) or « fatal » (special, contingent, singular). The intentional forces are agentive (volitive and located in agents) or magical (supernatural and non-agentive but still volitive). The scenario-framing, dynamically invested spaces are linked in a default diegetic order allowing forces to fire forwards and backwards, which explains how stories progress and end, and in particular, eventually, how they can mean what we report them to mean. Interpretation and interpretability depend on the dynamic « logic » of this spatial diegesis, more than on reader identifications in a story, or on ideologies ascribed to the narrator.
format Article
id doaj-art-1f2b4b7f1a4544e7bdfe2412281f4f07
institution OA Journals
issn 0993-8516
1765-307X
language fra
publishDate 2015-10-01
publisher Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire Récits Cultures Et Sociétés
record_format Article
series Cahiers de Narratologie
spelling doaj-art-1f2b4b7f1a4544e7bdfe2412281f4f072025-08-20T02:21:21ZfraLaboratoire Interdisciplinaire Récits Cultures Et SociétésCahiers de Narratologie0993-85161765-307X2015-10-012810.4000/narratologie.7291Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, HewingwayPer Aage BrandtThe aim of a cognitive narratology, as I see it, is to develop the literary and generally semiotic study of narratives through cognitive modeling, and to develop cognitive studies of mind and meaning by integrating insights from literary scholarship. In this article, I first examine the concept of narrative discourse (versus descriptive and argumentative discourse) ; second, I discuss the principles for distinguishing narrative subgenres (realistic, fantastic, marvelous, grotesque, absurd stories) ; and third, I propose a model of the constitutive architecture of narrative meaning as manifested by « good stories », stories that make sense by conveying a view of the human condition.In order to develop and test the model, I analyze a selection of acknowledged literary masterpieces : three short stories by Guy de Maupassant (Deux amis, La ficelle, La parure), two by Jorge Luis Borges (Emma Zunz, La otra muerte – The other death), one by Ernest Hemingway (A very short story). Through these analyses, including succinct literary interpretations of the texts, a new view of narrative dynamics is outlined. Agents operate in spaces that have specific dynamic properties, in that they display characteristic forces determining acts and events. There is, I postulate, a canonical set of narrative spaces, each encompassing and contributing a significant part of the meaning of a story. The model distinguishes four such spaces, which are typically also staged as distinct locations ; an initial conditioning space, a catastrophic space, a consequence space, and a conclusion space.Forces are described as causal or intentional. The causal forces are either trivial (habitual, regular, default, whether physical or social) or « fatal » (special, contingent, singular). The intentional forces are agentive (volitive and located in agents) or magical (supernatural and non-agentive but still volitive). The scenario-framing, dynamically invested spaces are linked in a default diegetic order allowing forces to fire forwards and backwards, which explains how stories progress and end, and in particular, eventually, how they can mean what we report them to mean. Interpretation and interpretability depend on the dynamic « logic » of this spatial diegesis, more than on reader identifications in a story, or on ideologies ascribed to the narrator.https://journals.openedition.org/narratologie/7291narrativecognitioncausationforce dynamicsspacesMaupassant
spellingShingle Per Aage Brandt
Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
Cahiers de Narratologie
narrative
cognition
causation
force dynamics
spaces
Maupassant
title Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
title_full Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
title_fullStr Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
title_full_unstemmed Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
title_short Forces et espaces : Maupassant, Borges, Hewingway
title_sort forces et espaces maupassant borges hewingway
topic narrative
cognition
causation
force dynamics
spaces
Maupassant
url https://journals.openedition.org/narratologie/7291
work_keys_str_mv AT peraagebrandt forcesetespacesmaupassantborgeshewingway