«Conte»

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Product details

  • ISBN 9783039118700
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 150 x 220mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2009
  • Publisher: Verlag Peter Lang
  • Publication City/Country: CH
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A majority of the chapters in this book were originally presented as papers at a conference held at Queen’s University Belfast in September 2006. The volume explores the oral-written dynamic in the conte français/francophone, focusing on key aspects of the relationship between oral and written forms of the conte. The chapters fall into four broad thematic areas (the oral-written dynamic in early modern France; literary appropriations and transformations; postcolonial contexts; storytelling in contemporary France: linguistic strategies). Within these broad areas, some chapters deal with sources and influences (such as that of written on oral and vice versa), others with the nature of the discourse resulting from an oral-written dynamic (discourse structure, linguistic features etc.), some with the oral-written interface as it affects the definition of genre, others with the role of the ‘oral’ within the literary or written text (use of storytelling scenarios, the problematics inherent in transcribing/adapting the spoken word etc.). This chronological and methodological range allows us to situate the emergence of the form in socio-cultural and historical terms, and to open up debate around the role of the conte in particular geographical and political contexts: regional, national, European and postcolonial.
This book contains contributions in both English and French.
The Editors: Janice Carruthers is a Senior Lecturer in French Studies at Queen’s University Belfast. She has published widely on tense and aspect in contemporary French, and on the structure of oral discourse, especially oral narrative. Her recent monograph brings together these two fields, Oral Narration in Modern French. A Linguistic Analysis of Temporal Patterns (2005).
Maeve McCusker is a Senior Lecturer in French Studies at Queen’s University Belfast. She has published extensively on Caribbean literature, notably a monograph (Patrick Chamoiseau: Recovering Memory, 2007), and a number of articles on créolité, on contemporary autobiography and on memory in Antillean fiction.