小说中的分布式代理

IF 0.8 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE
D. Tenen
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:在这项研究中,我建议避开围绕自由意志、代理或意志的哲学复杂性,转而支持它们的语言代理,句法。无论人们对任性的主语有什么看法,英语都会迫使我们的思维进入线性命题,其中主语动词是反对的。因此,处于主语位置的名词在语义上成为行动的原因,并反对其被动影响:飞行员驾驶飞机,维修人员清理积雪,恐怖分子引爆炸弹。在观察到行动者是那些行动的实体,并且行动通过动词表现出来之前,这种复杂的拟人化不需要完美地绘制出来。假设仅此而已,人们可以问:小说中什么样的名词可以“做”东西?谁是最常见的句法行为体?他们对谁或什么采取行动?通过这一点速记,我们可以讨论表征,而不是从有争议的哲学范畴,如名称或存在,而是与特定语法特征的关系。句法指向哲学主题。然后,我开发了一种计算方法,从小说(或任何其他可能涉及代理的句子集)中提取一组主要人物。在我的分析中,《海莉的机场》首当其冲,其他几部更为人熟悉的小说为正式文学方法的实验提供了比较。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Distributed Agency in the Novel
Abstract:In this study, I propose to side-step the philosophical complexity surrounding free will, agency, or volition in favor of their linguistic proxy, syntax. Whatever the belief about willful subjects, the English language forces our thoughts into linear propositions, where subject verbs object. As such, nouns in the subject position become semantically the causes of action, and objects their passive effects: pilots fly planes, maintenance crews clean snow, terrorists detonate bombs. Such complex personifications don't need to be mapped out perfectly before observing that actors are those entities that act, and that action manifests itself through verbs. Assuming little more than that, one can ask: What sorts of nouns get to "do" stuff in the novel? Who are the most common syntactical actants? And who or what do they act upon? With this bit of shorthand we can discuss characterization not in terms of contested philosophical categories, such as name or being, but in relation to specific grammatical features. The syntactic points to the philosophical subject. I proceed, then, by developing a computational method for extracting a set of main characters from a novel (or any other collection of sentences in which agency might be implicated). Hailey's Airport bears the brunt of my analysis, where a few other more familiar novels supply comparison for an experiment in formal literary method.
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来源期刊
New Literary History
New Literary History LITERATURE-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
11.10%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: New Literary History focuses on questions of theory, method, interpretation, and literary history. Rather than espousing a single ideology or intellectual framework, it canvasses a wide range of scholarly concerns. By examining the bases of criticism, the journal provokes debate on the relations between literary and cultural texts and present needs. A major international forum for scholarly exchange, New Literary History has received six awards from the Council of Editors of Learned Journals.
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