In:Insistent Images
Edited by Elżbieta Tabakowska, Christina Ljungberg and Olga Fischer
[Iconicity in Language and Literature 5] 2007
► pp. 247–265
‘Damn mad’
Palindromic figurations in literary narratives
Published online: 14 March 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/ill.5.21lju
https://doi.org/10.1075/ill.5.21lju
Palindromes are chiastic figurations that arrest the habitual tempo-linear sequence of language and, in so doing, focus attention on the very act of signification. In narrative, they often prove pivotal for the overall structure of the text, going far beyond mere wordplay or verbal virtuosity. Because they can be read both backwards and forwards, palindromes emerge as multilayered, multidirectional, and polytemporal mappings reflecting the notorious instability of human lives, where the ever shifting present oscillates between the past and the future. In contemporary fiction, such palindromic vacillation becomes an iconic representation of temporal shifting, allowing us to discern the texture of temporality, not as abstractly conceived but as concretely lived and hence as innovatively performing an unstable present.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
Jorge Eduardo Urueña López, Jamin Pelkey & L’udmila Lacková Bennett
Pelkey, Jamin
2022. Tonal iconicity and narrative transformation. In Iconicity in Cognition and across Semiotic Systems [Iconicity in Language and Literature, 18], ► pp. 135 ff.
Pelkey, Jamin
Pelkey, Jamin
Ljungberg, Christina
2020. Crisscrossing James Joyce’s Ulysses
. In Operationalizing Iconicity [Iconicity in Language and Literature, 17], ► pp. 199 ff.
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