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008 081012s1994 enka | 001 0 eng d
020 _a0194371859
039 9 _a201402040049
_bVLOAD
_c201005241347
_dmalmash
_c200810121406
_dNoora
_c200810121406
_dNoora
_y200810121405
_zNoora
050 _aP302.5
_b.C66 1994
100 1 _aCook, Guy.
_910092
245 1 0 _aDiscourse and literature :
_bthe interplay of form and mind /
_cGuy Cook
260 _aOxford :
_bOxford University Press,
_c1994
300 _ax, 285 p :
_bill ;
_c24 cm
440 0 _aOxford applied linguistics
_9137
504 _aIncludes bibliographies and index
505 _aAcknowledgements; Introduction; PART ONE; 1 A basis for analysis: schema theory, its general principles, history and terminology; Introduction; Schema theory: general principles; Examples demonstrating schemata in discourse processing; Evidence for schemata; World schemata and text schemata; The origins of schema theory; Bartlett's Remembering; The eclipse of schema theory; The revival of schema theory; The terminology of schema theory; Notes; 2 A first bearing: discourse analysis and its limitations; Introduction; 'Text', 'context', and 'discourse'; Acceptability above the sentence; Cohesion; The omission fallacy; Meaning as encoding/decoding versus meaning as construction; Pragmatic approaches and their capacity to characterize 'literariness'; Macro-functions; Discourse structure; Discourse as process (and literature as conversation); Discourse as dialogue; The 'post-scientific' approach; Conclusion; Notes; 3 A second bearing: AI text theory and its limitations; Introduction; The computational and brain paradigms of language; The constructivist principle; One system of conceptual construction: conceptual dependency theory (CD); Problems for conceptual constructions; A complex AI schema theory; Conclusion; Notes; 4 Testing the AI approach. Two analyses: a 'literary' and a 'non-literary' text; Introduction; Text One: the opening of Crime and Punishment (translation); Text Two: 'Every cloud has a Silver Lining' (advertisement); Conclusions from analyses; Notes; 5 A third bearing: literary theories from formalism to stylistics; Introduction; The rise of 'modern literary theory'; Theories of pattern and deviation; The formalist theory of defamiliarization; Patterns in discourse: structures and structuralism; Roman Jakobson's poetics; Conclusion; Notes; 6 Incorporating the reader: two analyses combining stylistics and schema theory; Introduction; Text Three: 'Elizabeth Taylor's Passion' (advertisement); Text Four: 'First World War Poets' (poem);
520 _aThis study examines the relevance of schema theory to literary theory and the analysis of literary texts. Schema theory suggests that people understand texts and experiences by comparing them with stereotypical mental representations of similar cases.
650 0 _aCriticism
_y20th century
_930889
650 0 _aDiscourse analysis
_92607
650 0 _aSchemas (Psychology)
_930890
650 0 _aReader-response criticism
_930891
650 0 _aApplied linguistics
_910087
650 0 _aLiterature
_xStudy and teaching
_930892
942 _2lcc
_n0
_cBK
999 _c13273
_d13273