Contents: Introduction Frame analysis in a fictional text


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Kumushxon Umaraliyeva CP

Fictional texts

The fictional text has always been one of the vital issues of stylistics. There are many scholars and famous philologists such as V.V. Vinogradov, V.V. Vinokur, I.R. Halperin, and R. Jacobson who conducted researches on the basis of fictional texts. According to D.U. Ashurova the fictional text is a specific type of communication characterized by the primary communicative activity of the author and the secondary communicative activity of the reader. The main aim of the fictional text is to reflect the imaginary world of the author. The most distinguishing feature of the literary text is its aesthetic function which presupposes the impact on the reader both by the linguistic form of the text and its conceptual content. Aesthetics of the text is closely related to the categories of imagery, evaluation and emotiveness, therefore the analysis of these categories and their verbal explications in the text arc of cultural concern of text theory. Anthropocentric character is another most essential property of the literary text.7 The principle of anthropocentrism is a vital problem of modern linguistics which shows that the study of language is closely related to human being. This issue was widely discussed in the works by V.V. Vinogradov, U.N. Karaulov, V.A. Maslova and others. Consequently, the anthropocentric perspective of the literary text requires the investigation of «linguistic personality». Linguistic personality in the fictional text is presented in two forms: the author’s image and that of the personage. One of the important peculiarities of literary text is its multilayered and multidimensional structure. There are different approaches to this problem. According to Turayeva's approach the layers can be classified into two types: surface and deep. The surface layer is interpreted as a verbal layer dealing with linguistic forms which include phonetic, morphological, lexical and syntactical levels. The deep layer contains conceptual information and puts forward the author's pragmatic intentions which reveal his outlook and his individual world picture containing moral values and aesthetic views of the author. According to Z.L. Khovanovskaya the layers are classified into: aesthetic, compositional and linguistic. M.P. Brandes highlights such levels as compositional, emotional and psychological. Besides, some scholars [1, p. 52] suggest the pragmatic level of the text which can be interpreted as the ability to produce an aesthetic effect on the reader. Some scholars differentiate the stylistic level of the text [2, p. 88]. The analysis of the stylistic level deals with: 1. Stylistic categories: emotiveness, implicitness, intertextuality, modality and imagery; 2. Stylistic devices and expressive means; 3. Foregrounding expressed by convergence of stylistic devices, key words, verbal signs of intertextuality, quotations and etc.; 4. Textual associative links which are based on the arrangement of the words and their meanings reflected in the context. In addition, according to some scholars there is the cultural level of the fictional text [1.p.19]. The cultural level reflects individual and national cultural values, knowledge about historical, political, social, religious notions and events. Cultural information is presented in the language by the means of linguistic forms: words, word combinations, phraseological units, text fragments. Some scholars outline the cognitive level of the fictional text. The cognitive level is closely related with aesthetic function of the text and represents an individual world picture reflecting the author’s world perception and aesthetic credo. Literary text as a multilayered structure in its interpretation considered in integrity of its linguistic and extra linguistic factors, the surface and deep layers of the text, its stylistic, communicative, pragmatic, cultural, cognitive and aesthetic aspects. In conclusion, it should be stressed the literary text is a specific type of communication characterized by: a) anthropocentric character; b) aesthetic values and cultural entity, c) a complex multidimensional structure. Fiction refers to any type of literature that's created from the imagination and typically has a narrative. It describes imaginary events and people. Usually, this comes in the form of books and stories. The word 'fiction' even comes from the Latin word 'fictus', which means 'to form' - fiction is stories that are 'formed' and created by a writer. There are many types of genres within fiction including mysteries, science fiction, romance, fantasy, and crime thrillers. Fiction is the opposite of non-fiction. It can be based on facts or real events, but the majority of the content has been curated by the writer using their own imagination. Fiction is typically read for pleasure, but it can also be analysed to discover themes and meanings. Imagery and setting: Images and use of setting can tell you a great deal about a character, a narrator, a fictional work:
Imagery as figurative language: what sort of metaphors, similes and analogies does the speaker use, and what does that tell you about their outlook and sensibility?
Images as motifs: are their recurring images? What ideas or feelings are aroused by them, what people or events are brought to mind by them?
Imagery as setting: How is the setting used? To create a sense of realism? To create mood? To represent or create a sense of states of mind or feelings? To stand for other things (i.e. symbolic or allegori). The narrator is the "voice" that tells a story (Narrator ≠ Author).8
The point of view is the perspective from which characters, events, etc. are presented in a fictional text. The chosen point of view has a strong effect on the reader; for example a character whose mind is "entered" in the first-person point of view tends to be more sympathetic to the reader. Characteristics of the first-person narrator are the limited point of view, that the character is a character in the story (either the protagonist or a minor character/observer of the protagonist), interior monologues (which present the thoughts, associations and memories in the characters mind) and streams of consciousness (which are a continuous flow of thoughts and emotions and reveal the spectrum of the character's mental processes). Characteristics of the third-person narrator are that he can appear as an omniscient narrator (the narrator knows everything about the characters and events, he has access to the minds of all the characters, their feelings and motifs, he can move in time and place and has the possibility to comment on actions and thoughts of the characters), a third-person limited narrator (the narrator only reports about thoughts, associations and memories of selected character/s as center/s of consciousness from outside of the action while using "he" and/or "she " to refer to the characters) or by reported thought (the narrator reports in a free indirect style as reported speech (past tense only), which gives an intimate access to the ind/s of the character/s, while not using phrases like "he thought").
The plot is the arrangement of events chosen by the author (e.g. starting in the middle of events (in medias res) and using flashbacks). The plot can cause a very detailed and organized perception of the events for the reader or create suspense depending on the type of text (e.g. historical novels/detective stories). Furthermore time is subjective. The author can choose to summarize many years in one paragraph or dedicate many chapters to a single event (fast-paced <-> slow-paced).
When analysing the plot possible stages like the introduction/exposition, the rising action, the climax, the turning-point/crisis and the conclusion/denouement can be found. Further aspects to consider are if a conflict and/or subplot are present. There are two maintypes of conflicts. The outer conflict, in which external forces cause a conflict with/for the protagonist, and the inner conflict, in which the protagonist is forced to make a difficult choice, which leads to a conflict. A subplot is a second story next to the main plot, which is independent and only connects to the main plot in the ending or only has the task to give the reader further understanding. (+ moment of retardation before the resolution of the conflict)9




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