Brian Richardson presents a study that explores in depth one of the most significant aspects of late modernist, avant-garde, and postmodern narrative. Unnatural Voices analyzes in depth the creation, fragmentation, and reconstitution of experimental narrative voices that transcend familiar first- and third-person perspectives. Going beyond standard theories that are based in rhetoric or linguistics, this book focuses on what innovative authors actually do with narration.
Richardson identifies the wide range of unusual narrators, acts of narration, and dramas with the identity of the speakers in late modern, avant-garde, and postmodern texts that have not previously been discussed in a sustained manner from a theoretical perspective. He draws attention to the more unusual practices of Conrad, Joyce, and Woolf as well as the work of later authors like Beckett and recent postmodernists. Unnatural Voices chronicles the transformation of the narrator figure and the function of narration over the course of the twentieth century and provides chapters on understudied modes such as second-person narration, “we” narration, and multiperson narration. It explores a number of distinctively postmodern strategies, such as unidentified interlocutors, erased events, the collapse of one voice into another, and the varieties of postmodern unreliability. It offers a new view of the relations between author, implied author, narrator, and audience and, more significantly, of the “unnatural” aspects of fictional narration. Finally, it offers a new model of narrative that can embrace the many non- and anti-realist practices discussed throughout the book.
Author(s): Brian Richardson
Series: Theory and interpretation of narrative
Edition: 1
Publisher: Ohio State University Press
Year: 2006
Language: English
Commentary: Found by chance through google on a random server of a university. It seems like a pre-print made public by mistake.
Pages: 182
City: Columbus
Tags: narratology
preface ix
acknowledgments xiii
chapter one Introduction: Transgressing Self and voice—Contemporary Fiction and the death of the Narrator 1
chapter two “at First you Feel a bit lost”: The varieties of Second Person Narration 17
chapter three Class and Consciousness: “We” Narration from Conrad to Postcolonial Fiction 37 chapter four I, etcetera: multiperson Narration and the Range of Contemporary Narrators 61
chapter five Three Extreme Forms of Narration and a Note on Postmodern Unreliability 79
chapter six Unnatural Narration in Contemporary drama 106
chapter seven Implied authors, historical authors, and the Transparent Narrator: Toward a New model of the Narrative Transaction 114
chapter eight Conclusion: voicing the Unspeakable 134
appendix: bibliography of “We” Narratives 141
Notes 143
Works Cited 151
Index 161