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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Narrative Progression in the Short Story

A corpus stylistic approach

Michael Toolan
University of Birmingham

2009. xi, 212 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3338 7 / EUR 99.00 / USD 149.00
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PaperbackNot yet available
978 90 272 3343 1 / EUR 33.00 / USD 49.95

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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9061 8 / EUR 99.00 / USD 149.00
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One of our most valuable capacities is our ability partly to predict what will come next in a text. But linguistic understanding of this remains very limited, especially in genres such as the short story where there is a staging of the clash between predictability and unpredictability. This book proposes that a matrix of narrativity-furthering textual features is crucial to the reader’s forming of expectations about how a literary story will continue to its close. Toolan uses corpus linguistic software and methods, and stylistic and narratological theory, in the course of delineating the matrix of eight parameters that he sees as crucial to creating narrative progression and expectation. The book will be of interest to stylisticians, narratologists, corpus linguists, and short story scholars.


Table of contents

Acknowledgements
ix–x
List of figures and tables
xi
Chapter 1. Introduction: Narrative prospecting
1–13
Chapter 2. Collocation and corpus stylistics
15–30
Chapter 3. Lexical patternings in short stories
31–51
Chapter 4. Top keyword sentences as story waymarking
53–76
Chapter 5. Keywords and the language of guidance in "The Love of a Good Woman"
77–95
Chapter 6. Repetition and para-repetition in story structure
97–112
Chapter 7. Prospection and expectation: Core signalling
113–133
Chapter 8. Prospection and expectation: Embedded signalling
135–164
Chapter 9. The textual tracking of suspense and surprise.
165–188
Chapter 10. Next steps
189–200
References
201–208
Name index
209
Topic index
211–212