Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://sci.ldubgd.edu.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/17045
Title: Crisis and Creation: Linguistic Innovation, Dark Fantasy and the Construction of Possible Worlds in Joe Abercrombie’s The Blade Itself
Authors: Пальчевська, Олександра Святославівна
Palchevska, Oleksandra
Keywords: crisis of representation
dark fantasy
possible world
neologism
lexical creation
semantic derivation
compounding
Issue Date: 2025
Publisher: BRILL
Abstract: Dark fantasy confronts a fundamental linguistic crisis: standard language inadequacy to express the complex moral ambiguities, psychological depths, and dystopian realities that define the genre. This study examines how Abercrombie addresses this representation crisis in The Blade Itself through systematic linguistic innovation and neologica l creativity. The research investigates the crisis at multiple interconnected levels: the semantic crisis of conventional fantasy discourse that fails to capture dark fantasy's moral complexity; the expressive crisis of standard English vocabulary when confronting concepts beyond traditional literary boundaries; and the cultural crisis of bridging fictional worlds with contemporary reality. Abercrombie’s response to these crises involves creating an extensive neologisms’ corpus that not only constructs his dark possible world but challenges conventional discourse limitations. Through comprehensive linguistic analysis, this study creates and analyzes the neologisms’ corpus from The Blade Itself, employing context analysis, word-formation analysis, etymologica l examination, and linguo-cultural investigation. The research reveals how Abercrombie deploys lexical units with predominantly negative connotations to construct a possible world reflecting dark fantasy's bleakness and moral ambiguity. The analysis identifies semantic derivation, particularly metaphoric transfer, and compounding as the most productive strategies applied by the author. The findings demonstrate that Abercrombie's innovations serve dual purposes: creating authentic-feeling cultures, traditions, and societies within his possible world, while simultaneously addressing standard English expressive limitations when depicting complex dark fantasy concepts. His linguistic strategies include the creation of proper names, geographical designations, cultural ranks, and conceptual terminology that collectively establish a coherent possible world. This study contributes to understanding how dark fantasy literature navigates the crisis between linguistic limitation and creative necessity, revealing neologisms as a tool for expanding the expressive capacity of language in speculative fiction. The research illuminates how authors construct worlds transcending conventional discourse boundaries, offering new pathways for representing complex human experiences that standard language cannot adequately capture.
URI: https://sci.ldubgd.edu.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/17045
Appears in Collections:2025

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