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==== The End of the Novel and the Future of an Illusion ====
==== The End of the Novel and the Future of an Illusion ====
The final chapter Bode forms of presence or absence of experience (s) to the story of the narrator, the sense orientation and sense-making experiments in novels and finally the future of the novel in the environment of ever stronger competition from visual media studied (as opposed to print media) as TV , cinema (video, DVD) and audio available on the internet.
In the final chapter, Bode examines forms of presence or absence of experience(s) of the narrator in respect to his/her narration, the sense orientation and sense-making experiments in novels and finally the future of the novel in the environment of ever stronger competition from visual media (as opposed to print media) as TV , cinema ([[video]], [[DVD]]) and audio available on the [[internet]].

:In the last chapter, Bode examines forms of Vorhandenseins oder der Abwesenheit von Erfahrung(en) auf die Geschichte des Erzählers, die Sinnorientierungen und Sinnstiftungsversuche in Romanen und abschließend die Zukunft des Romans im Umfeld immer stärkerer Konkurrenz durch visuelle Medien (im Gegensatz zu [[Printmedien]]) wie [[Fernsehen|TV]], [[Kinofilm]] ([[Videofilm|Video]], [[DVD]]) und audiovisuelle Angebote im Internet.


=== Further Reading ===
=== Further Reading ===

Revision as of 07:41, 29 September 2016

German Version

The Novel: An Introduction is a general introduction to narratology, written by Christoph Bode, Full Professor and Chair of Modern English Literature in the Department of English and American Studies at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The first edition of Der Roman was published 2005 at A. Francke Verlag (UTB, Tübingen and Basel) in German; in 2011, the second revised and extended German edition followed, als well as the English translation.

Content

A preface preceds the nine thematic chapters; references and an extensive and commented bibliography conclude the book.[1]

Preface

The preface encourages a departure from the purely formal and narrow text analysis by repeatedly asking the question "What's the difference ?": What kind off effect would have resulted, if the narrator would have described certain people, situations or circumstances in a different (perspective, succession etc.) way? And why did he or she chose not to do this? Taking this approach, the analysis proceeds from the How to the What - and not vice versa.
Acknowledgements conclude the preface.

Narrative theory and analysis of novels

Here, each thematic chapter is described in a short summary without citing the many literature examples in the text of The Novel: An Introduction.

Beginnings - What Do You Eexpect?

The chapter introduces the topic. It discusses the "beginning" and the "meaning" of a novel, the socio-cultural conventions/rules and the methodology of linking the individual events, which may be used in this narrative form, as well as the interactions of these elements. As a special case the autobiographical novel (it's me, who tells) is treated. Finally, a brief discourse is made on the (legitimate, successful, ...) capture of the novel reader: the very first sentences of the story.

The Modern European Novel: Predecessors, Origins, Conventions, Sub-Genres

With documents and examples, the historical development of the modern European novel is shown. The terms "fact" and "fiction" are explained, and told fiction, illusion and narrated realism be delineated. The diversity of types of novels is outlined.

The Object of Evert Analysis: The How of the What (Discourse and Story)

The introduction to novel analysis is given. A summary table illustrates the thematic terms, which are used by various known narratologists (Gérard Genette, Seymour Chatman, Mieke Bal, Shlomith Rimmon-Kenan, Gerald Prince, and Franz Karl Stanzel).

Time

Topics in this chapter are the "narrative time", that is, the approximate time required for the reader to read the novel, and the "telling time", i.e. the period that is covered by the novel. Their ratio, the "narrative pace" (narrative pace = telling time ÷ narrative time) may be changed several times within a novel by the narrator and thus be used to slow down (here it is important, here we remain longer) or to accelerate (lessening of importance) the narration.

Furthermore, the "order", the sequence of narrated events - either natural succession or sequence anachronism (prolepsis, i.e. anticipation); analepsis, a flashback) - and the "frequency", that is the repeated narration of identical or equivalent events - discussed. Finally, the importance of using different tempi is elaborated.

Characters

With examples, Bode analyzes and documents character design and character development in the novel; "figure" means in the broadest sense: a person, a protagonist, a being.

Teutonic Rosette or Gallic Taxonomy? Identifying the Narrative Situation

In this longest chapter (more than a quarter of the book) two models of narrative theory — the typological model of Franz K. Stanzel (Bode: "Teutonic Rosette") and the narrative theory of Gérard Genette (Bode: "Gallic Taxonomy") — are explained, compared and commented.

Multiperspectivity, Unreliability, and the Impossibility of Editing Out the Gender Aspect

This chapter covers aspects and interpretations of multi-perspective narration, discusses the difficulty to objectively recognize "unreliable narration", that is, "If the reader has reasonable grounds to distrust a tale", and highlights the problems of gender of the narrator, the narrative person, within the narrative.

Now You See It, Now You Don't: Symbolism and Space

Here addresses the challenge of symbolism, that "If a little is particularly striking" - that symbolism is not necessarily seen as a "symbol" - to recognize, for example, allegories, metaphors, metonymy, and to "decode" and wonder why the narrator has just taken this choice of presentation.

   By "space" is set to "semantisierte rooms", that is described in the plot locations (nature, cities, spaces, etc.) received that not only stand for what is generally understood among them, but the narrator also parallel to the figure (supra) or are applied to the situation of FIG.

The end of the novel and the future of Illusion

Hier wird auf die Herausforderung eingegangen, Symbolik, d.h. „wenn einem etwas besonders auffällt“ – also Symbolik nicht unbedingt als „Symbol“ verstanden – beispielsweise Allegorien, Metaphern, Metonymien, zu erkennen und zu „decodieren“ und sich zu fragen, warum der Erzähler gerade diese Wahl der Darstellungsweise getroffen hat.
Mit „Raum“ wird auf „semantisierte Räume“, d.h. in der Handlung beschriebene Örtlichkeiten (Natur, Städte, Räume, etc.) eingegangen, die nicht nur für das stehen, was man gemeinhin darunter versteht, sondern die vom Erzähler auch parallel zur Figur (s.o.) oder zur Situation der Figur angelegt sind.

The End of the Novel and the Future of an Illusion

In the final chapter, Bode examines forms of presence or absence of experience(s) of the narrator in respect to his/her narration, the sense orientation and sense-making experiments in novels and finally the future of the novel in the environment of ever stronger competition from visual media (as opposed to print media) as TV , cinema (video, DVD) and audio available on the internet.

Further Reading

Die Basisbibliothek Romananalyse: Empfohlene Titel enthält 16 referenzierte und von Bode kommentierte Buchtitel zu Themen der Erzähltheorie/Narratologie, Perspektivenstruktur, Erzähltextanalyse und Romantheorie.

Das Literaturverzeichnis erhält knapp 400 Literaturverweise auf 30 Seiten.

Reception

"Appealingly wide-ranging in his choice of illustrative texts, Bode offers us tools for understanding how the narrative techniques of novels affect their content. While the book's topical arrangement facilitates selective reading, its lively and accessible style, nicely preserved in this translation, amply rewards sequential reading."
Nicholas Halmi, University College Oxford


"Moreover, Bode’s clarifications of concepts, jargon and theories, as well as his persuasive emphasis on the ‘possibilities of the generation and construction of meaning’ (p. 256), will make the reader return to this multi-layered and meaningful introduction."
European Review of History: Revue europeenne d'histoire, 6. Juli 2012


"With the provocative question "What do you expect?" Christoph Bode sets the tone for this delightful guide to the experience of novel-reading. Ranging from the beginnings of the European novel to twenty-first-century fiction, drawing examples from English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Russian, and Scandinavian literature, and explicating European and Anglo-American narratological theories, this erudite book remains eminently accessible thanks to its focus on fundamental questions: How do stories begin – and why? Why does fiction evoke reality? How does a narrative manipulate time? Who speaks – and can we believe him or her? What is a symbol and why does it matter? Above all: what's the difference between one way of telling a story and another? In a refreshingly lively style, Bode's The Novel shows students and readers how to ask meaningful questions about the choices that authors make and how to make sense out of the answers."
Angela Esterhammer, Universität Zürich

References

German Edition

  • Christoph Bode: Der Roman, A. Francke Verlag (UTB 2580; Tübingen, Basel), 1. Edition (2005), 349 p., ISBN 3-7720-3366-0 and ISBN 3-8252-2580-1
  • Ebenda, 2. erw. Auflage (2011), ISBN 978-3825225803

English Edition

  • Christoph Bode: The Novel: An Introduction, Wiley-Blackwell, 1st edition (2011), 312 p., ISBN 978-1405194471

Einzelnachweise und Erläuterungen

[[Kategorie:Roman, Epik]] [[Kategorie:Literarischer Begriff]] [[Kategorie:Lehrbuch]]