Introduction to Literary Studies

Vorlesung von Heyl + Altklausurfragen - Die Altklausuren liefen immer nach dem selben Schema ab: 4. Fragen (auf 3 davon kann man sich gut vorbereiten). 1. Frage - Wissen zu Sonetten, Shakespeare, Metrum, Reimschema etc.; 2. Frage - Wissen zu Quellen / Portalen auf denen Literatur zu finden ist (z.B. ECCO, JSTOR etc.); 3. Frage - Erzählperspektive / Erzählsituation bestimmen (nach Genette und/oder Stanzel); 4. Frage - zusätzliches Wissen auf der Vorlesung — Viel Erfolg! :)

Vorlesung von Heyl + Altklausurfragen - Die Altklausuren liefen immer nach dem selben Schema ab: 4. Fragen (auf 3 davon kann man sich gut vorbereiten). 1. Frage - Wissen zu Sonetten, Shakespeare, Metrum, Reimschema etc.; 2. Frage - Wissen zu Quellen / Portalen auf denen Literatur zu finden ist (z.B. ECCO, JSTOR etc.); 3. Frage - Erzählperspektive / Erzählsituation bestimmen (nach Genette und/oder Stanzel); 4. Frage - zusätzliches Wissen auf der Vorlesung — Viel Erfolg! :)


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narrator invisible, merely a reporting voice 

heterodiegetic narrator 

homodiegetic narrator 

Narrator outside the story 

Narrator inside the story 

What are the different types of narrators according to Genette? 

Basic question: Who is perceiving? 

  • Narrator part of the events?
    • narrator inside the story: homodiegetic narrator
    • narrator outside of story: heterodiegetic narrator 
  • Narrator recognizable?
    • narrator invisible, merely a reporting voice: covert narrator
    • narrator visible, refers to themselves: overt narrator 
  • reliable vs. unreliable narrators 

What are Stanzel's and Genette's general questions when it comes to narrative? 

  • Stanzel: who is speaking?
  • Genette: Who is perceiving? 
    • ("Focalization", Genette's term "focalizer": very similar to Stanzel's "personale Erzählsituation") 

What is a Figural narrative situation? 

  • personale Erzählsituation
  • no visible or identifieable narrator
  • grammatically: third person (she thought..., he saw...., she felt...
  • .... but thoughts and perceptions of one character, the "reflector" figure 
  • Figural narrative situation tries to depict what goes on in a characters mind
    • heavily influenced by psychoanalysis (only comes into being in the late 19th century) 

 

What is an authorial narrator? 

  • auktorialer Erzähler
  • Narrator outside the events
  • ability to look into the characters' thoughts
  • knowledge of past, present and future

 

What is a first-person narrator? 

  • Ich-Erzähler
  • "I-as-protagonist": narrator as 1 central character
  • "I-as-witness": narrator as a marginal figure
  • Narrating-I (erzählendes Ich) vs- Experiencing-I (erlebendes Ich) 

 

What is a dynamic character? 

What is a static character? 

What is a round character? 

What is a flat character? 

What are the key constituents of a "story"? 

  1. Setting: place and time
    • symbolic settings? (Location, weather...)
    • present, past (historical novel), future? Constellations of settings
  2. Characters
    • flat characters (types, one-dimensional) or round (complex) characters? 
    • Static or dynamic characters
    • constellations of characters
  3. Events 
  • Endings
    • open versus closed ending (closure) 
    • poetic justice? → Good wins, bad fails  
  • Setting, characters and events are connected
    • characters can be characterized by their surroundings

 

What is the difference between story and discourse in narrative? 

  • Story (what is told?) 
    • events
    • existents
      • setting
      • characters
  • Discourse (how is it told?) 
    • who tells the story
    • when, how, to whom? 
    • Treatment of time 

What is a plot according to E.M. Forster? 

The logically connected sequence of events 

"The king died and then the queen died of grief" 

What is a story according to E.M. Forster? 

A sequence of at least two events

"The king died and then the queen died" 

 

What does "the artificially of narratives" mean? 

  • Life does not have a plot
    • stories have a beginning and an end
    • life has pre-history and post history 

What are the functions of narrative? 

  • Narrative as a fundamental human activity in various fields of life :
    • medicine
    • jusdiction (case studies)
    • history
    • everday life...
  • narrative as a form of understanding and explaining the world (myths, religious texts, etc.) 
  • it is through narrative that we give shape to our experience: we tell stories to understand and make sense of our lives
  • narrative as a way of constructing an identity: 
    • "to answer the question 'who?' Is to tell a story"
  • to be human = to tell stories. Humans are the only animals that tell stories  

What is the overlap between poetry and narrative prose? 

  • Poems can be narrative, plays tell a story
  • narrative prose and plays can use language that is poetic, i. e. Highly structured 

What was the general idea of the world like during Beckett's times? 

  • Erosion of the belief of the idea that the world makes sense
  • Background: Erosion of old grand narratives 

What was the general idea of the world like during Shakespeare's times? 

  • General idea: the world makes sense, there is causality and order
  • background: ground narratives. The Bible 

What basic orientations cans literary theories have? 

  • Author-centered 
  • reader-centered
  • text-centered
  • context-centered 

What are the two ways of beginning a story? 

  1. In medias res (in the middle) 
  2. ab ovo (from the beginning) 

What is the Blackfriar? 

Two theatres in London in the 16th century. 

What are scribble publications? 

The text is copied manually / by hand 

What kind of stage is this? 

What kind of stage is this? 

What kind of stage is this? 

What kind of stage is this? 

What is a folio "F"? 

  • After Shakespeare's death: first edition of his collected works: 
  • the first Folio ("F"), 1623 

What are quartos "Q"? 

  • Early editions of printed versions of Shakespeare's plays 
  • published in Shakespeare's lifetime
  • based on reconstruction of the plays, often from memory, unreliable 

Who prepared the printed editions of Shakespeare's plays? 

How many original manuscripts of Shakespeare's plays survived? 

How many of his plays did Shakespeare get printed? 

From when on were women on stages in drama? 

1660

How was a theatre stage build during the 16th - 17th century? 

  • Apron stage 
  • tiring house (section of theatre reserved for the actors) 
  • galleries (balcony) 
  • pit (where the groundlings stand) 

What is a "coaching inn"? 

Courtyard with galleries on three sides (often in red-light districts) 

"Theatre used to be less high class than it is today"