Del 12 - Sounds – Meaning – Communication
Collective Memory and Oral Text
Inbunden, Engelska, 2020
1 019 kr
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Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.The aim of this monograph is an attempt to examine the relationship between collective memory and oral texts. The material basis for this presentation consists of folklore oral texts, both prosaic and poetic, different as regards their genres (fairy tales, fables, recollections, traditions, legends, proverbs, and songs) as well as texts that are fragments of spontaneous interviews. The monograph consists of five main parts devoted to the following themes: theoretical considerations, the relation between memory and language, text memory, genre memory, and the relation between memory and the folk artistic style.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2020-03-09
- Mått148 x 210 x 0 mm
- Vikt551 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieSounds – Meaning – Communication
- Antal sidor374
- FörlagPeter Lang AG
- ISBN9783631808009
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Marta Wójcicka: I have been working as a professor at the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin. My research interests lie within Texts, Collective Memory, and Communication in Culture.
- Abbreviations ....................................................................................................... 17Part I: Theoretical issuesI Collective memory: definitions, types, functions ................... 211 Memory: collective or social? .............................................................. 212 Collective memory: literal or metaphorical? ..................................... 233 Collective memory: a sum total of individual memories, or asupraindividual construct? ................................................................... 254 Memory vs. history: relational possibilities ....................................... 264.1 Memory versus history: disintegrating approaches ................... 274.2 Memory versus history: integrating approaches ........................ 325 Collective memory: definitions and attributes .................................. 356 Collective memory: typological attempts .......................................... 407 Collective memory: functions ............................................................. 54II Cultural heritage – memory – texts of culture .......................... 571 Memory as a carrier vs. memory carriers: preliminary remarks ........ 572 UNESCO’s Convention for the Safeguarding of the IntangibleCultural Heritage: definition and scope ............................................. 583 Cultural heritage as a building material of memory ......................... 594 Memory as a carrier of cultural heritage ............................................ 605 Text of culture as a manifestation of cultural heritage ..................... 635.1 Text of culture: what is it? ............................................................. 635.2 Text of culture: a survey of definitions ........................................ 645.3 Text of culture as a structure ........................................................ 655.4 Text of culture as a process ........................................................... 665.5 Linguistic (oral) text as a prototypical text of culture ............... 695.5.1 Texts of culture: an analogy to natural language ......... 725.5.2 Texts of culture as an amalgam of codes ....................... 725.5.3 Intersemiotic translation of texts of culture intonatural language: selected issues .................................... 736 Cultural heritage ・ memory ・ texts of culture: research andanalytical perspectives .......................................................................... 75Part II: Memory in language – language-embeddedIII Memory depicted in linguistic metaphors .................................. 831 ‘Metaphor bridges reason and imagination’ ...................................... 832 Memory in linguistic metaphors: a state of research ........................ 853 Memory as a structure and a process: specific elaborations ............ 864 Is memory a language-like entity? ...................................................... 98IV Proper names as carriers of collective memory ..................... 1031 Cooking as language and memory .................................................... 1042 Names of dishes as carriers of declarative memory ........................ 1063 Functions of dish names ..................................................................... 113Part III: Memory and text – text memoryV Oral text structure as a reflection of memory structure ..... 1191 Oral text vis-a-vis oral memory ......................................................... 1192 Text as a memory aid: recalling a text from memory ..................... 1233 Text as a memory mirror: textual ways of expressing memory .... 1253.1 Text structure based on intertextual memory .......................... 1273.1.1 Intertextual memory: procedural dimension ............. 1273.1.2 Intertextual memory: the structural dimension ........ 1303.2 Text structure based on associative memory (keywords) ...... 1313.3 Text structure based on intertextuality-cum-associationmemory ......................................................................................... 139VI Text variation as information about the collectivememory functioning of a text ......................................................... 1491 The double nature of a folklore text as collective memoryinformation .......................................................................................... 1492 Folklore text variation: from structure of a text to picture ofan object ................................................................................................ 1503 Morphological analysis as an examination of an oral textcirculation in collective memory ....................................................... 1544 Text in a social group’s memory: circulation of an oral text .......... 1555 Folklorism: from cultural to intercultural memory ordialogue with tradition and traditional ways of apprehendingfolklore .................................................................................................. 174VII Memory figures versus memory aspects in oral texts .......... 1991 Memory figures in a research perspective ........................................ 1992 Memory in a functional perspective ................................................. 2002.1 Time ・ narration ・ memory ....................................................... 2002.1.1 Time vis-a-vis order of discourse ................................. 2022.1.2 Time vis-a-vis order of events ...................................... 2052.1.2.1 Creating the world of a narrative ................ 2112.1.2.2 Time in creating a protagonist .................... 2132.2 Space ・ narrative ・ memory ....................................................... 2162.2.1 Space vis-a-vis order of discourse ................................ 2172.2.2 Space vis-a-vis order of events ..................................... 2183 Reconstructivism as an objective aspect of memory ...................... 2313.1 Mythological reconstructivism .................................................. 2323.2 Belief-oriented reconstructivism ............................................... 2443.3 Apocryphal reconstructivism ..................................................... 2473.4 Historical reconstructivism ........................................................ 2513.5 Family-personal reconstructivism ............................................. 2593.6 Ritual reconstructivism ............................................................... 2614 Subjective aspect of memory: reference to a social group ............. 2704.1 The addresser of a text ................................................................. 2704.2 The addressee ............................................................................... 2945 Functions of memory figures ............................................................. 298Part IV: Memory and text genre – genre memory and genrenon-memoryVIII Memory types versus genre differentiation in folkloretexts ............................................................................................................. 3051 Genres of collective memory and non-memory ............................. 3052 Folklore genre as a factor of collective memory andnon-memory ........................................................................................ 3063 Memory as a criterion of typologising folkloregenres: mnemonic typology of texts of folklore .............................. 3093.1 The Criteria of folklore genre differentiation ........................... 3093.2 The memorates-fabulates distinction versus mnemonictypology of folklore genres ......................................................... 3123.3 Features of memory figures versus genre differentiationof folklore texts ............................................................................. 3133.4 Traditional and modern folklore genres in a memorytheory perspective ........................................................................ 3144. Transformations of folklore text genres: from communicativeto cultural memories ........................................................................... 322Part V: Memory and linguistic style – style memoryIX Memory as a distinguishing value of folk artistic style ....... 3311 Collective memory style ..................................................................... 3312 Folk artistic style in a folklorist perspective .................................... 3323 Memory as a worldview category ...................................................... 3333.1 Memory as a source of collectivity ............................................ 3353.2 Memory as support of orality ..................................................... 3374 Formula as a main exponent of memory ......................................... 3385 Memory as a treasure of folklore, folklore as a narrative aboutmemory ................................................................................................ 340Bibliography ....................................................................................................... 343Sources .................................................................................................................. 367List of Diagrams ............................................................................................... 369List of Tables ....................................................................................................... 371