Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://sci.ldubgd.edu.ua/jspui/handle/123456789/8621
Title: The Interaction of Possible Worlds through the Prism of Cognitive Narratology
Authors: Babelyuk, Oksana
Koliasa, Olena
Matsevko-Bekerska, Lidiia
Matuzkova, Olena
Pavlenko, Nina
Keywords: cognitive
interaction
narratology
narrator
possible worlds
types
Issue Date: 24-Jun-2021
Citation: Babelyuk, O., Koliasa, O. , Matsevko-Bekerska, L., Matuzkova, O. & Pavlenko, N. (2021). The Interaction of Possible Worlds through the Prism of Cognitive Narratology. Arab World English Journal, 12 (2) 364-376. DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.24093/awej/vol12no2.25
Series/Report no.: Arab World English Journal (AWEJ) Volume 12. Number2;
Abstract: The article deals with the analysis of literary narrative where a possible unreal fictional world and a possible real fictional world usually coexist. When the norms of life plausibility are consciously violated, the real and the unreal possible worlds are emphatically opposed. Hence, their certain aspects are depicted in a fantastically exaggerated form. The interaction of possible worlds in a literary narrative destroys the stereotypes of the reader’s perception. It can occur in different planes: structural (a shift of plot elements of the story, transformation, unusual, sharp turns of the borrowed plot, violations of a plotline); fictional (a combination of real and fantastic features in one image); temporal (violations of the chronological flow of time, a shift of time flow); spatial (expansion or contraction of space, magical spatial formations, displacements, deformations). By their nature, the interaction of different possible worlds can be continuous, partial, and fragmentary; resulting from their boundaries may overlap or be violated (entirely or partially). The continuous interaction of different possible worlds, destruction of their borders, although they do not disappear completely, make them largely blurred, interpenetrating each other. In the case of partial interaction of possible worlds, their boundaries intersect. In the case of fragmentary interaction of possible worlds, their common points are slightly visible, for example, only the borrowed title of a literary work or a character’s name, or a fantastic concrete event or a place of the event
URI: http://sci.ldubgd.edu.ua:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/8621
Appears in Collections:2021

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