Home Linguistics & Semiotics Towards a new convergence between Anglo-American and Russian literary linguistics: “mind style” and “kartina mira”
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Towards a new convergence between Anglo-American and Russian literary linguistics: “mind style” and “kartina mira”

  • Ben W. Dhooge
Published/Copyright: October 5, 2010
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Journal of Literary Semantics
From the journal Volume 39 Issue 2

Abstract

Anglo-American and Russian stylistics influenced each other substantially in the 1960s and 1970s. From the 1980s on, however, this fruitful mutual influence came to an end. The two schools started to grow apart, but despite that, they would develop almost parallel to each other, displaying many theoretical and methodological similarities. The present paper illustrates this by highlighting one such specificity – the idea of the possible reflection of one's conceptualization of the world in the use of literary language, and the possibility of reconstructing that conceptualization by means of a stylistic analysis (‘mind style’–‘kartina mira’). By comparing the Anglo-American and Russian theories on the topic, it is shown that the separately evolved conceptions are similar and even complement each other: the differences between them clarify and help solve possible theoretical and methodological gaps. Moreover, the juxtaposition of both conceptions allows us to perfect the notion of ‘mind style’ and its practical applications. A similar approach to other conceptions and tendencies in current seemingly mutually independent Anglo-American and Russian stylistics have the same potential, and may lead to a new convergence between the two schools.


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Published Online: 2010-10-05
Published in Print: 2010-September

© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York

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