“Nobody disappears. People don’t just disappear”: Repetition and negation as dialogic devices in Caryl Phillips’s “Northern Lights”

IF 0.3 2区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Daria Tunca
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract This article investigates the literary significance of two linguistic devices, repetition and negation, in the fictionalized biography “Northern Lights” by British-Caribbean writer Caryl Phillips, a narrative that focuses on David Oluwale, a Nigerian immigrant to the UK who died as a result of police violence in Leeds in 1969. To recount Oluwale’s story, “Northern Lights” uses a non-linear structure that juxtaposes stylistically diverse material such as eyewitness testimonies, a history of the city of Leeds, administrative documents, and passages featuring an authorial figure who apostrophizes the dead Oluwale. Analysing linguistic patterns found within and across these different textual segments, this article argues that repetition and negation play a key role in generating forms of dialogism that, in turn, implicitly indicate how “Northern Lights” positions itself towards Oluwale and his controversial story. From a more broadly methodological perspective, the article seeks to advance knowledge of how negation and repetition, when jointly studied as pragmatic phenomena, can impact literary strategies of characterization and reinforce a text’s poetic effects.
“没有人消失了。人不会凭空消失”:重复与否定在卡里尔·菲利普斯的《北极光》中的对话手法
摘要:本文探讨了英国加勒比裔作家卡里尔·菲利普斯的虚构传记《北极光》中重复和否定两种语言手法的文学意义,该小说讲述了1969年在利兹因警察暴力而死亡的尼日利亚移民大卫·奥卢瓦莱的故事。为了讲述Oluwale的故事,《北极光》采用了非线性结构,并将不同风格的材料并列在一起,如目击者的证词、利兹市的历史、行政文件和以一位作家为死者Oluwale致敬的段落。本文分析了这些不同文本片段内部和之间的语言模式,认为重复和否定在产生对话形式中起着关键作用,而对话形式反过来又隐含地表明了《北极光》如何将自己定位于奥卢瓦莱和他有争议的故事。从更广泛的方法论角度来看,本文试图推进对否定和重复作为语用现象共同研究时如何影响文学人物塑造策略和加强文本诗歌效果的认识。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
10.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The aim of the Journal of Literary Semantics is to concentrate the endeavours of theoretical linguistics upon those texts traditionally classed as ‘literary’, in the belief that such texts are a central, not a peripheral, concern of linguistics. This journal, founded by Trevor Eaton in 1972 and edited by him for thirty years, has pioneered and encouraged research into the relations between linguistics and literature. It is widely read by theoretical and applied linguists, narratologists, poeticians, philosophers and psycholinguists. JLS publishes articles on all aspects of literary semantics. The ambit is inclusive rather than doctrinaire.
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