Article published In: Textual choices and discourse genres: Creating meaning through form
Edited by Barbara Dancygier and José Sanders
[English Text Construction 3:2] 2010
► pp. 165–184
Alternativity in poetry and drama
Textual intersubjectivity and framing
Published online: 11 October 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/etc.3.2.03dan
https://doi.org/10.1075/etc.3.2.03dan
This paper considers the use of alternativity and stance in dramatic and poetic discourse. After a brief look at negation as a phenomenon based on alternative mental spaces, I show how negation can be viewed as ‘intersubjective’. The paper then looks at the intersubjective aspects of negation in a scene from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar (I come to bury Caesar, not to praise him). In the next sections, the poetic style of Wislawa Szymborska comes under investigation. In particular, the discussion highlights mechanisms such as frame-evocation, counterfactuality, causation, blending, and the alternativity of or. I argue throughout that the primary role of negation and alternativity in dramatic and poetic discourse is making available uncommunicated mental spaces and construals which are then used in the resulting interpretation.
Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
Nahajec, Lisa
Dancygier, Barbara
[no author supplied]
2021. The power of nothing. In Negation, Expectation and Ideology in Written Texts [Linguistic Approaches to Literature, 38], ► pp. 203 ff.
[no author supplied]
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