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  1. Narrative Instability
    Destabilizing Identities, Realities, and Textualities in Contemporary American Popular Culture
    Erschienen: 2019
    Verlag:  Universitätsverlag Winter, Heidelberg

    This book introduces the concept of ‘narrative instability’ in order to make visible a new trend in contemporary US popular culture, to analyze this trend’s poetics, and to scrutinize its textual politics. It identifies those texts as narratively... mehr

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    This book introduces the concept of ‘narrative instability’ in order to make visible a new trend in contemporary US popular culture, to analyze this trend’s poetics, and to scrutinize its textual politics. It identifies those texts as narratively unstable that consciously frustrate and obfuscate the process of narrative understanding and comprehension. Despite—or rather, exactly because of—their destabilizing tendencies, such texts have attained mainstream popularity in recent years across media, most prominently in films, video games, and TV series. Focusing on three clusters of instability that form around identities, realities, and textualities, the book argues that narratively unstable texts encourage their audiences to engage with the constructedness of their universes, that narrative instability embodies a new facet of popular culture, that it can only be understood transmedially, and that its textual politics particularly speak to white male middle-class Americans.

     

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  2. Metareference as a Public Service : Performed by Contemporary Narrative Media
    Autor*in: Baeva, Elena
    Erschienen: 2019
    Verlag:  Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn

    Building on decades' worth of research by scholars such as L. Hutcheon, W. Nöth, A. Nünning, I. O. Rajewsky, P. Waugh, W. Wolf and others on the topics of self-reference, metafiction and metanarration, this transmedial study aims to demonstrate that... mehr

     

    Building on decades' worth of research by scholars such as L. Hutcheon, W. Nöth, A. Nünning, I. O. Rajewsky, P. Waugh, W. Wolf and others on the topics of self-reference, metafiction and metanarration, this transmedial study aims to demonstrate that far from being "narcissistic narrative[s]" (Hutcheon), many contemporary metareferential works attempt to perform a public service, namely that of educating the general public. For the purpose of this demonstration, the present doctoral thesis first provides a critical analysis of both the early and the current terminology used in the study of metareference, as well as an in-depth discussion of the functions and effects traditionally ascribed to the use of metareference, both in fiction in general and in specific media. Building on this theoretical foundation, this dissertation subsequently proceeds to examine eleven contemporary works from five different narrative media, all of which utilise numerous different types of metareferences to achieve their ultimately didactic goal of raising their audience's medium-awareness, specifically in regards to the role the respective medium plays in society. Within the medium of literature, this study analyses I. McEwan's Atonement (2001) and M. Zusak's The Book Thief (2007), and focuses predominantly on the roles language and literary tropes, reading and writing are shown to play in shaping not only our individual identities, memories, beliefs and perceptions but also our cultural memory and societal norms. The section dedicated to the medium of film discusses E. E. Merhige's Shadow of the Vampire (2000) and M. Scorsese's Hugo (2011) – two very different takes on the nature, magic and social impact of cinema. Within the medium of television, this doctoral thesis analyses A. Sorkin's Sports Night (1998-2000), Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (2006-2007) and The Newsroom (2012-2014), all the while focusing especially on Sorkin's idealistic portrayal of the positive role television could play in our society as a major source of both ...

     

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