Faculty of philology department of english philology viktorija mi
Represented and Representational Time
Download 0.71 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Represented MEANING Representational time time
- Mrs Ramsay saying ‘Life stand still here’; Mrs Ramsay making of the moment
3.2. Represented and Representational Time
In their study, Onega and Landa distinguish two more kinds of time which are employed in works of fiction. According to the theorists(1996:109), “even within the framework of a single work, therefore, we generally discover different ratios of represented time (i.e., the duration of a projected period in the life of the characters) to representational time (i.e., the time that it takes the reader, by the clock, to peruse that part of the text projecting this fictive period).” This statement leads us to the premise that indeed, the clear quantitative difference between represented time and representational time exists. Here I propose the following figure: Figure 5. Represented and Representational Time Represented MEANING Representational time time Figure 5. Represented and Representational Time As Onega and Landa explain further (1996: 110), represented time is used to indicate the amount of time a certain imaginary activity takes in the work of fiction, while representational time 60 shows the period of real time which a reader needs to read the text and to reflect of it. Representational time can be easily measured by clock. By comparison, represented time is usually fragmented, non-linear, as some events in the life of the characters are emphasized and rendered at great length, others are simply summarized in a couple of sentences, some details are even unmentioned in order to give the readers more possibilities to think, reflect on the text, and to make their own conclusions. Representational time does not necessarily stand in direct proportion to represented time because the readers each with his own conception of life grasp the essence of the text in different ways. The more importance an element carries, the more accurate and detailed its picture is. However, this peculiarity is applied more to represented time which describes life of the fictional characters. Onega and Landa (1996:111) note that the reader raises many questions and wants to know who the centre of interest of the work is, how themes, motifs, characters, and incidents coincide, what role every single detail has in the text. Indeed, the text usually does not provide explicit answers to these questions, thus, the reader is forced to follow numerous implications in order to get the answers. Although represented and representational times indicate different aspects of time in reality and in fiction, they should not be analyzed separately. The two notions are closely interrelated and thus, the meaning of a literary work can be achieved only by combining them. According to Onega and Landa (1996:112), during the period of Modernism, there was a tendency to over-estimate the importance of represented time that focused on the narrative in fiction. On the one hand, it was natural because modernist writers aimed to carry the analysis of human inner world and human mind the mechanism of which was based on the subjective personal concept of time. On the other hand, the external temporal context, or representational time, added a lot to the value of a literary work because it provided a better understanding of the message that work carried. For instance, in Woolf’s fiction, the psychological analysis of human mind is carried, thus, represented time has a lot of importance. To ground these statements, let us now consider the following examples from To the Lighthouse (1927) which describes Lily s memories concerning Mrs Ramsay. (23) Mrs Ramsay saying ‘Life stand still here’; Mrs Ramsay making of the moment Download 0.71 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling