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Document Description
Title
Narrative
and
talk
:
a
study
in the
folkloric
communication
of
everyday
conversational
exchange
Author
Laba
,
Martin
,
1950-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1983.
Folklore
Date
1983
Pagination
ix, 260 leaves
Subject
Communication
in
folklore--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
Folklore--Newfoundland
and
Labrador
Degree
Ph.D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of Folklore
Discipline
Folklore
Language
eng
Notes
Bibliography
:
leaves
241-260
Abstract
A
view
of the
strategic
use
of
folklore
in
everyday
life
, and in
particular
,
verbal
folklore
as
it
is
constituted
by its
social
occasion
,
implies
that
it
is
not
merely
the
presence
of a
stylized
and
traditional
item
of
expression
that
determines
the
folkloric
character
of the
occasion.
If
we
can
speak
of an
entire
situation
or
event
as
folkloric
it
is
because
folklore
is
first
embedded
in
, and
second
determined
by the
normal
flow
of
verbal
exchange.
The
suggestion
is
a
distinct
continuity
between
a
folkloric
performance
occasioned
by
conversation
and the
conversation
itself.
This
,
thesis
focuses
on the
nature
of this
continuity
and
specifically
on the
entire
conversational
event
through
which
narrative
is
achieved
and
fashioned.
--
The
analytical
perspective
involved
and the
diversity
of
issues
addressed
by this
study
necessitate
a
multi-disciplinary
approach.
While
the
primary
theoretical
and
methodological
framework
is
folkloristic
,
other
related
theories
and
methods
are
drawn
from
communication
,
cultural
anthropology
, the
ethnography
of
speaking
, the
sociology
, of
conversational
interaction
,
sociology
,
poetics
, and
literary
and
linguistic
,
stylistics.
In this
way
,
various
topics
and
themes
are
treated:
the
definition
of
"conversational
narrative"
, the
analysis
of
conversation
in the
''activity
of
stylization"
, the
interface
between
folkloric
speech
and
natural
discourse
, the
stylistic
and
structural
connections
between
narrative
and
conversation
, and the
organization
of
narrative
communication.
--
In their
concern
with
explicating
the
formal
,
performative
dimension
of
folkloric
expressions
,
folklorists
have
emphasized
the
differences
between
folklore
and
other
casual
or
less
formal
kinds
of
communication.
Performance-oriented
studies
of
narrative
have
dealt
with a
process
of
foregrounding
whereby
a
stylized
model
of
communication
, the
communicative
act
itself
, and the
expressive
skills
of the
narrator
are
all
highlighted.
This
thesis
examines
the
nature
of the
background
, the
conversational
basis
which
structures
and
situates
folkloric
expression
, and the
relationship
between
the
formal
and
informal
behaviours
that
make
up
conversational
exchange.
Conversational
narratives
are
situationally
and
thematically
determined
by the
manner
and
subject
of
discussion
and
accordingly
,
particular
attention
is
paid
to
speech
in the
informal
,
casual
interactions
of
everyday
life.
The
speech
event
(conversation)
and the
speech
act
,
(narrative)
then
, are
viewed
not
only
as
interdependent
but
interdeterminate.
--
The
sociology
of
conversational
interaction
has
demonstrated
that
natural
conversation
depends
on the
complicated
negotiation
of
acquired
rules
based
in
both
immediate
circumstances
(the
context
of the
speech
event)
and the
larger
culture.
These
rules
are
structuring
or
patterning
principles
which
are
analyzed
as
factors
that
serve
to
make
speech
exchange
systematic.Similarly
,
folklore
in the
form
of the
conversational
narrative
is
viewed
as a
patterning
principle
in
conversational
interaction
and
conversation
itself
is
under
stood
as
exerting
a
modifying
influence
on
style
,
content
and
form
of
personal
narrative
and
personal
performance.
–
Narrative
operates
to
compose
and
define
our
perceptions
of
reality
, and
transforms
these
perceptions
into
codes
for
existence
, into
expressive
forms
of
personal
knowledge.
This
thesis
establishes
and
analyzes
the
significance
and
method
of this
narrative
function
, and
through
three
case
studies
and
interpretations
of
contributing
theory
,
develops
a
concept
of
, and
manner
of
approach
to the
folkloric
dimension
of
everyday
conversational
exchange.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
75272096
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(60.08
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Laba_Martin.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
63360.cpd