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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Nonverbal Communication across Disciplines

Volume 3: Narrative literature, theater, cinema, translation

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Fernando Poyatos
University of New Brunswick

2002. xx, 287 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2183 4 / EUR 110.00
978 1 55619 755 0 / USD 165.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9710 5 / EUR 110.00 / USD 165.00
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This volume, based on the first two, identifies the verbal and nonverbal personal and environmental components of narrative and dramaturgic texts and the cinema — recreated in the first through the ‘reading act’ according to gaze mechanism and punctuation — and traces the coding-decoding processes of the characters’ semiotic-communicative itinerary between writer-creator and reader-recreator. In our total experience of a play or film we depend on the sensory and intellectual relationships between performers, audience and the environment of both, in a temporal dimension starting on the way to the theater and ending as one comes out. Two chapters discuss the speaking face and body of the characters and the explicit and implicit (at times ‘unstageable’) paralanguage, kinesics and quasiparalinguistic and extrasomatic and environmental sounds in the novel, the theater and the cinema, and the functions of personal and environmental silences. Another shows the functions, limitations and problems of punctuation systems in the creative-recreative processes and how a few new symbols and modifications would avoid some ambiguities. The stylistic, communicative and technical functions of nonverbal repertoires in the literary text are then identified as enriching critical analysis and offering new perspectives in translation. Finally, ‘literary anthropology’ (developed by the author in the 1970s) is is presented as an interdisciplinary area based on synchronic and diachronic analyses of the literatures of the different cultures as a source of anthropological and ethnological data.

Nearly 1200 quotes from 170 authors and 291 works are added to those in the first two volumes.


Table of contents

Preface
xiii
Introduction
xv–xix
Nonverbal communication in the text
1–34
The semiotic-communicative itinerary of the character between writer and reader or spectator
35–64
Sound and silence in the text
65–102
Kinesics and the other visual systems in the novel and the theater
103–124
Punctuation as nonverbal communication
125–151
Functions of nonverbal communication in literature
153–182
Literary anthropology
183–240
Notes
241–248
List of illustrations
249
Scientific references
251–259
Literary references
261–271
Index of literary authors and works quoted
273–278
Name index
279
Subject index
283–285