Tellability
Détails
ID Serval
serval:BIB_B9E70221EBE2
Type
Partie de livre
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Tellability
Titre du livre
The Living Handbook of Narratology
Editeur
Hamburg University Press
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
04/2014
Editeur⸱rice scientifique
Hühn P., Meister J. C., Pier J., Schmid W.
Pages
NA
Langue
anglais
Résumé
Tellability is a notion that was first developed in conversational storytelling analysis but which then proved extensible to all kinds of narrative, referring to features that make a story worth telling, its "noteworthiness." Tellability (sometimes designated "narratibility" or "reportability") is dependent on the nature of specific incidents judged by storytellers to be significant or surprising and worthy of being reported in specific contexts, thus conferring a "point" on the story. The breaching of a canonical development tends to transform a mere incident into a tellable event, but the tellability of a story can also rely on purely contextual parameters (e.g. the newsworthiness of an event); in conversation it is often negotiated and progressively co-constructed through discursive interaction. Tellability may also be dependent on discourse features, i.e. on the way in which a sequence of incidents is rendered in a narrative.
Mots-clé
tellability, narratology, conversation analysis, point, interest
Site de l'éditeur
Création de la notice
30/10/2015 11:50
Dernière modification de la notice
20/08/2019 15:27