Negating narration, crushing communication: the nonnarrated and the disnarrated in The Lemon Table
Keywords:
Narration, nonnarrated, disnarrated, communication, The Lemon Table., Narration, nonnarrated, disnarrated, communication, The Lemon TableAbstract
This paper analyzes the narrative techniques of nonnarration and disnarration employed in Barnes’ collection of short stories, The Lemon Table, and links them with one of the book’s main thematic concerns – narration as communication – or, rather, its almost complete absence.
References
Barnes, J. 2005. The Lemon Table. London: Pan Macmillan Ltd.
Christensen, J. 2004. Interfictional Pockets: A Narratological Investigation of Temporal Hypotheses and Hypertrophied-Hypothesis in Postmodern Literature, Aalborg: Aalborg University Press.
Mosher, H. 1993. The narrated and its negatives: The nonnarrated and the disnarrated in Joyce’s Dubliners. Style 27, 407-428.
O’Connor, F. 1965. The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story. London: Macmillan.
Prince, G. 1992. Narrative as Theme: Studies in French Fiction. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Prince, G. 1988. The Disnarrated. Style 22, 1-8.
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