Multimodal stylistics of the novel : more than words /: more than words. (2018)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Multimodal stylistics of the novel : more than words /: more than words. (2018)
- Main Title:
- Multimodal stylistics of the novel : more than words
- Further Information:
- Note: Nina Nørgaard.
- Authors:
- Nørgaard, Nina
- Contents:
- Figures. Permissions. Preface. 1 Introduction. 1.1 Aims and motivations. 1.2 Structure of the book. 2 Multimodal stylistics – what, why and how? 2.1 Preliminaries. 2.2 Stylistics. 2.2.1 Formalist stylistics. 2.2.2 Functionalist stylistics. 2.2.3 Historical stylistics. 2.2.4 Cognitive stylistics. 2.2.5 The cornerstones of stylistics. 2.3 Social semiotic multimodal theory. 2.3.1 Multimodality, modes and semiotic resources. 2.3.2 Discourse, design, production and distribution. 2.3.3 Further remarks on social semiotic multimodal theory. 2.4 Multimodal stylistics. 2.4.1 Motivations and challenges. 2.4.2 Multimodal stylistics today. 2.4.3 Doubly deictic subjectivity, mimesis and defamiliarisation. 2.4.4 Other approaches to multimodality and the novel. 2.5 Further methodological considerations. 2.5.1 Literary data I: multimodality and the novel. 2.5.2 Analytical focus – text, context, author, reader. 2.5.3 Literary data II: selection and representation of examples. 2.6 Concluding remarks. 3 Wording. 3.1 Preliminaries. 3.2 Experiential meaning – language as representation. 3.2.1 Experiential meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.3 Interpersonal meaning – Language as exchange. 3.3.1 Interpersonal meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.4 Textual meaning – Language as text. 3.4.1 Textual meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.5 Faulkner’s text as a functional act of communication between author and reader. 3.6 Concluding remarks. 4 Typography. 4.1 Preliminaries. 4.2 A social semioticFigures. Permissions. Preface. 1 Introduction. 1.1 Aims and motivations. 1.2 Structure of the book. 2 Multimodal stylistics – what, why and how? 2.1 Preliminaries. 2.2 Stylistics. 2.2.1 Formalist stylistics. 2.2.2 Functionalist stylistics. 2.2.3 Historical stylistics. 2.2.4 Cognitive stylistics. 2.2.5 The cornerstones of stylistics. 2.3 Social semiotic multimodal theory. 2.3.1 Multimodality, modes and semiotic resources. 2.3.2 Discourse, design, production and distribution. 2.3.3 Further remarks on social semiotic multimodal theory. 2.4 Multimodal stylistics. 2.4.1 Motivations and challenges. 2.4.2 Multimodal stylistics today. 2.4.3 Doubly deictic subjectivity, mimesis and defamiliarisation. 2.4.4 Other approaches to multimodality and the novel. 2.5 Further methodological considerations. 2.5.1 Literary data I: multimodality and the novel. 2.5.2 Analytical focus – text, context, author, reader. 2.5.3 Literary data II: selection and representation of examples. 2.6 Concluding remarks. 3 Wording. 3.1 Preliminaries. 3.2 Experiential meaning – language as representation. 3.2.1 Experiential meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.3 Interpersonal meaning – Language as exchange. 3.3.1 Interpersonal meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.4 Textual meaning – Language as text. 3.4.1 Textual meaning in The sound and the fury. 3.5 Faulkner’s text as a functional act of communication between author and reader. 3.6 Concluding remarks. 4 Typography. 4.1 Preliminaries. 4.2 A social semiotic multimodal approach to typography. 4.2.1 Typographic distinctive features. 4.2.2 Typographic semiotic principles. 4.2.3 Metafunctions and typography. 4.3 Typographic meaning in the novel. 4.3.1 Index. 4.3.2 Icon. 4.3.3 Discursive import. 4.3.4 Symbol. 5.1 Concluding remarks. 5 Layout. 5.1 Preliminaries. 5.2 Kress and van Leeuwen’s systems for the analysis of layout. 5.2.1 Information structure. 5.2.2 Salience. 5.2.3 Connectivity: framing and linking. 5.3 The meaning of layout in the novel. 5.3.1 Paragraphs, sections, chapters and pages. 5.3.2 Other types of text block. 5.3.3 Letter spacing, line spacing, blank space. 5.3.4 Linking. 5.4 Concluding remarks. 6 Photographs, drawings and other graphic elements. 6.1 Preliminaries. 6.2 Kress and van Leeuwen’s visual grammar. 6.3 The meaning of photographs, drawings and other graphic elements in the novel. 6.3.1 Photographs. 6.3.2 Drawings. 6.3.3 Other graphic elements. 6.4 Concluding remarks. 7 The book cover. 7.1 Preliminaries. 7.2 Graphic book cover designs – The curious incident of the dog in the night-time. 7.3 Photographic book cover designs – On the road. 7.4 Film tie-ins and bestseller emulation – discursive import and the significance of context. 7.5 Concluding remarks. 8 The materiality of the novel. 8.1 Preliminaries. 8.2 The book as a three-dimensional object. 8.3 The physical form of cover and binding. 8.4 The semiotics of paper. 8.5 Concluding remarks. 9 Conclusion. 9.1 Preliminaries. 9.2 Insights and contributions. 9.3 Further directions. Appendix A: Colour images. Appendix B: The multimodal stylistics toolkit. Index. … (more)
- Edition:
- 1st
- Publisher Details:
- London : Routledge
- Publication Date:
- 2018
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 809.3
Fiction -- History and criticism
English language -- Style - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781351382311
9781351382328
9781351382304
9781315145556 - Related ISBNs:
- 9781138503809
- Notes:
- Note: Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.
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- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
- Access Usage:
- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.337529
- Ingest File:
- 01_284.xml