Throughout Hogan demonstrates the intellectual and practical value of stylistic analysis as a means of understanding, appreciating, and producing narratives. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals.

J. D. Harding, Saint Leo University, CHOICE

Hogan applies research from cognitive and affective science to develop a new branch of stylistics he calls affective-cognitive stylistics. . . . Throughout Hogan demonstrates the intellectual and practical value of stylistic analysis as a means of understanding, appreciating, and producing narratives.

CHOICE

It is a beautifully written and gratifying text.

William Brown, Projections: The Journal for Movies and Mind

Literary style is something many people talk about, but few could define. Yet it is crucial for our response to narrative art. Style can facilitate or obscure the events of a story or the motivations of a character, enhance the aesthetic appeal of a narrative or complicate its emotional impact, and even inflect the political or ethical implications of a work. It is precisely this complex operation of style that Patrick Colm Hogan explains in Style in Narrative. Drawing on recent psychological research, this book proposes a new and clear definition of style and provides a systematic theoretical account of style in relation to cognitive and affective science. Hogan's definition stresses that style varies by both scope, or the range of text or texts that may share a style, and level, the components of an individual work that might involve a shared style. The book uses rich examples from literature, film, and graphic fiction, including analysis of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, Shakespeare's canon, William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying, and Art Spiegelman's Maus, as well as visual analysis of films by Robert Rodriguez, Deepa Mehta, Eric Rohmer, M.F.Husain, Yasujiro Ozu, and Chuan Lu. Through these studies Hogan identifies stylistic concerns common across mediums as well as the most consequential stylistic differences between them. Bringing together three often separated mediums within a coherent framework, Style in Narrative makes an important contribution to and necessary intervention in the field of stylistics.
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Drawing on recent psychological research, this book proposes a new and clear definition of "style" and provides a systematic theoretical account of style in relation to cognitive and affective science. Patrick Hogan uses rich examples from literature, film, and graphic fiction to explain the narrative, thematic, and emotional functions of style in narrative.
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Introduction. Cognitive and Affective Stylistics Part One: Literature I. Literary Style II. Story Structure: Shakespeare and the Integration of Genres III. Verbal Narration: Ambiguities of Faulkner's As I Lay Dying Part Two: Film IV. Film Style V. Perceptual Interface and Painterly Cinema: Three Minutes of Robert Rodriguez's Sin City VI. Emplotment: Ellipsis and Excess in Yasujiro Ozu's Postwar Films VII. Visual Narration: Embodiment and Point of View in Lu Chuan's Nanjing! Nanjing! Part Three: Graphic Narrative VIII. Stylistic Choices in Graphic Narrative: Particularity and Its Functions in Art Spiegelman's Maus Afterword. Keep Stylistics Great: A Note on Politics and the Analysis of Style Works Cited
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"Throughout Hogan demonstrates the intellectual and practical value of stylistic analysis as a means of understanding, appreciating, and producing narratives. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals." -- J. D. Harding, Saint Leo University, CHOICE "Hogan applies research from cognitive and affective science to develop a new branch of stylistics he calls affective-cognitive stylistics. . . . Throughout Hogan demonstrates the intellectual and practical value of stylistic analysis as a means of understanding, appreciating, and producing narratives." -- CHOICE "It is a beautifully written and gratifying text." -- William Brown, Projections: The Journal for Movies and Mind
Les mer
Selling point: Advances a new definition of style with precision and clarity to describe and explain stylistic properties in terms of current cognitive and affective psychology Selling point: Relates style to the narrative, thematic, and emotional functions that it serves in narrative artworks Selling point: Sets out the stylistic concerns common across literature, film, and graphic fiction, but also isolates their most consequential stylistic differences
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Patrick Colm Hogan is a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in the English Department and the Cognitive Science Program at the University of Connecticut. Hogan is the author of twenty-four books and over 200 articles and book chapters, as well as the editor or co-editor of five books, six special issues of journals, and the web-based Literary Universals Project. His research combines cognitive and affective science with narrative theory to address problems in literary aesthetics and politics.
Les mer
Selling point: Advances a new definition of style with precision and clarity to describe and explain stylistic properties in terms of current cognitive and affective psychology Selling point: Relates style to the narrative, thematic, and emotional functions that it serves in narrative artworks Selling point: Sets out the stylistic concerns common across literature, film, and graphic fiction, but also isolates their most consequential stylistic differences
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780197539576
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
680 gr
Høyde
157 mm
Bredde
239 mm
Dybde
23 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Patrick Colm Hogan is a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor in the English Department and the Cognitive Science Program at the University of Connecticut. Hogan is the author of twenty-four books and over 200 articles and book chapters, as well as the editor or co-editor of five books, six special issues of journals, and the web-based Literary Universals Project. His research combines cognitive and affective science with narrative theory to address problems in literary aesthetics and politics.