And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language

The aim of this paper is to provide an explanation of Janet Frame’s short story “The Birds Began to Sing” through a detailed study of the grammatical marker “and”, using concepts borrowed from cognitive grammar and the “theory of enunciation”. It also attempts to show how linguistic theory can be ap...

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Main Author: Wilfrid Rotgé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAES 2016-04-01
Series:Angles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1956
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author Wilfrid Rotgé
author_facet Wilfrid Rotgé
author_sort Wilfrid Rotgé
collection DOAJ
description The aim of this paper is to provide an explanation of Janet Frame’s short story “The Birds Began to Sing” through a detailed study of the grammatical marker “and”, using concepts borrowed from cognitive grammar and the “theory of enunciation”. It also attempts to show how linguistic theory can be applied to a literary text, which is not used just as a linguistic corpus but analyzed in its literary specificity. The coordinator “and”, which is often perceived semantically as well as stylistically as unimportant, lies at the heart of Janet Frame’s short story. It gives it meaning and reveals an underlying complexity beneath the short story’s apparent simplicity and ultimately false naivety.
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spelling doaj-art-92cc0fb1d7bf4e75ac62fc2bd57806a62025-08-20T03:07:27ZengSAESAngles2274-20422016-04-01210.4000/angles.1956And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s LanguageWilfrid RotgéThe aim of this paper is to provide an explanation of Janet Frame’s short story “The Birds Began to Sing” through a detailed study of the grammatical marker “and”, using concepts borrowed from cognitive grammar and the “theory of enunciation”. It also attempts to show how linguistic theory can be applied to a literary text, which is not used just as a linguistic corpus but analyzed in its literary specificity. The coordinator “and”, which is often perceived semantically as well as stylistically as unimportant, lies at the heart of Janet Frame’s short story. It gives it meaning and reveals an underlying complexity beneath the short story’s apparent simplicity and ultimately false naivety.https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1956literaturelinguisticsFrame Janetshort storycognitive grammarcoordinator
spellingShingle Wilfrid Rotgé
And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
Angles
literature
linguistics
Frame Janet
short story
cognitive grammar
coordinator
title And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
title_full And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
title_fullStr And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
title_full_unstemmed And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
title_short And: A Complex Little Word at the Heart of Janet Frame’s Language
title_sort and a complex little word at the heart of janet frame s language
topic literature
linguistics
Frame Janet
short story
cognitive grammar
coordinator
url https://journals.openedition.org/angles/1956
work_keys_str_mv AT wilfridrotge andacomplexlittlewordattheheartofjanetframeslanguage