Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
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THE NOTION OF TIME
NATURAL CONCEPTUAL (clock-time) (mind-time) FICTIONAL (story-time) Figure 3. The Notion of Time. As can be seen in Figure 3 above, natural time is public time, it is the time indicated by clocks. By comparison, it could be added that conceptual, psychological time, or phenomenological time, is private time. It is perhaps best understood as awareness of physical time. Psychological time passes relatively quickly for people while they are enjoying an activity, but it slows dramatically if they are waiting for some unpleasant event to occur or to be completed. This totally different speed of passing time can be explained by that fact that the clock is measuring physical time and is not affected by anybody’s awareness. Conceptual time, as Genienė explains (ibid.), is rather abstract and related to mental human abilities. In addition, psychological time is completely transcended in the mental state of happiness and enlightenment, that is often called nirvana, and we might interpret this as implying that psychological time stops completely. Conceptual time shows temporal reality in the way human beings perceive it in their mind, whereas natural time simply indicates neutral 50 parts of the time as a whole that is divided into longer or shorter periods, namely: minutes, hours, days, months, seasons, etc. However, Onega and Landa (1996: 112) argue that physical time is more fundamental even though psychological time is discovered first by each of us as we grow out of our childhood, and even though psychological time was discovered first as we human beings evolved from our ancestors. By comparison to the two aforementioned kinds of time, fictional time is a device created to attain certain psychological effects. Onega and Landa (1996: 110) assume that this is imaginary time describing the life of the characters in a particular piece of fiction. Indeed, in literature, the past can be subsequent to the present, it can merely be a remote past that never actually dissolves into the recent past, the point from which the narrator is narrating, as in most classical traditionally arranged novels. In addition, in Genienė’s opinion (2007:24), literary works usually include an eternal present without either past or future, or a certain labyrinth in which past, present and future coexist, at the same time complementing and annihilating each other. Typically, novels have a beginning and an end and, and in the fictional world life has a perceptible meaning, as the reader can see the narrated events from a perspective never provided by the real life. Without doubt, as Stevenson says (1998:19), this way of presenting events sometimes “limitates the capacity to grasp what is happening” and thus, it becomes more complicated for the reader to understand the essence of the literary work. Indeed, it is possible to agree with Stevenson’s idea that sometimes modernist fiction simply betrays life, portraying everything from the subjective, interpretive, and unreliable perspective . Thus, as Genienė concludes (2007), the reader is given a number of different occasions to guess, interpret, or to doubt if his or her understanding is correct, which is both good for imaginative readers willing to draw their conclusions and bad for those who prefer exact neutral descriptions. As can be seen from the evidence above, the notion of time is rather complicated and can be divided on the basis of different criteria. As Eman Chowdhary and Kirti Kaul say (2006:6), even today, man knows a little about how the origin and nature of this notion. However, both scientists express hope that with the help of science, much has been written about space and time explorations and thus, these notes are a significant means help for every person interested in the studies of these two concepts. In general, time is an abstract notion, which is impossible to measure, control, or to stop. On the other hand, people have invented a number of ways of dividing and naming theoretically measurable and practically experienced parts of the temporal whole that surrounds all the living creatures. Time can be universal and private, neutral and subjective, real and fictional. Overall, adhering to the aforementioned explanations by Stevenson, Onega and Landa, and 51 Genienė, I would suggest depicting the relationships between these kinds of time in the following figure: Figure 4. The Dynamics of Relationship between Different Time Systems E X T Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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