I. Chronotope
II. Genre
III. Issues to discuss
I. Chronotope
A. Literary, "time-space." A unit of analysis for studying
texts according to the ratio and nature of the temporal and spatial
categories represented. The distinctiveness of this concept as
opposed to most other uses of time and space in
literary analysis lies in the fact that neither category is
privilege; they are utterly interdependent.
B. time,...thickens, takes on flesh, becomes artistically
visible; likewise, space becomes charged and responsive to the
movement of time plot and history P184
C. Background studies (relating ideas of Bakhtin's forming the
concept of chronotope)
1. Kant a. time and
space are indispensable forms of cognition.
b. different from Kant-time and space are
regarded “not as‘transcendental' but as forms of the most immediate
reality”.
2. Relativity theory
a. inseparability of time and event; time as the
fourth dimension of space
P116 (Dialogism)
b. “the event [or co-being] of existence
D. Functions of chronotope
1. device-particular
combinations of time and space as they have resulted
in historically manifested narrative forms P109
(Dialogism)
2. fundamental tool for a broader social and historical analysis
a. art and lived experience
P111 (Dialogism)
chronotope provides a means to explore the complex, indirect and
always
mediated relation between art and life
b. Balzac's novels-salon-different
societies and periods result in different
chronotope both inside and outside literary text
3. a way to rearrange the
"distorted" pattern of events back to their
"proper" or, their “real-life” chronology
E. Three novelistic chronotopes
1. The Greek Romance: Adventure Novel of ordeal
a. “suddenly” and “at just that moment” as the characteristic of
this type of time P184
b. a human being is passive; fate presents the important role of
change one's life P185
c. the meaning of finding one's identity; name has the specific
meaning P127 (Dialogism)
2. Adventure Novel of everyday
life a.
metamorphosis-transformation
and identity
b. how an individual becomes other than what he was
c. a new image of a hero who is purified and reborn
d. wanderings-“the path of life”
3. Ancient biography and
autobiography a.
how a citizen's life is perceived
b. the public square vs. real-life
c. self and other; the self's identity needs to be legitimized by
some agency
outside itself P134 (Dialogism)
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II. Genre
a horizon of expectations brought to bear on a certain class of
text types: a concept larger than literary genre; unifies and
stratifies language; to define the kind of formula that have tended
to limit literary discourse.
A. genre is a master category in dialogism P 145
B. genres are different ways to codify the rules assumed to
govern time/space relations in the class to which any given text
belongs; an X-ray of a specific world view, a crystallization of the
concepts particular to a given time and to a given social stratum in
a specific society.
C. relationship between chronotope and genre-chronotope
determines genre, but genre also determines it
D. importance of genre-as norm to
individual text
E. a genre embodies a historically specific idea of what it means
to be human.
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III. Issues to discuss
1. What can readers learn the concept of chronotope from
Bakhtin's theory? What is the relation between chronotope and
history, chronotope and culture, and chronotope and ideology?
*historical facts
*chronology
*public and private life (external and internal life)
*ideology
2. What is the relation between chronotope and genre?
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