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E-raamat: New Perspectives on Narrative and Multimodality

Edited by (University of Leicester, UK)
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The contributors in this collection question what kinds of relationships hold between narrative studies and the recently established field of multimodality, evaluate how we might develop an analytical vocabulary which recognizes that stories do not consist of words alone, and demonstrate the ways in which multimodality brings into fresh focus the embodied nature of narrative production and processing. Engaging with a spectrum of multimodal storytelling, from ‘low tech’ examples encompassing face-to-face stories, comic books, printed literature, through to opera, film adaptation and television documentary, stretching beyond to narratives that employ new media such as hypertext, performance art, and interactive museum guides, this volume examines the interplay of semiotic codes (visual, oral, aural, haptic, physiological) within each case under scrutiny, thereby exposing both points of commonality and difference in the range of multimodal narrative experiences.

List of Figures and Tables
vii
Permissions xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction
1(13)
Ruth Page
Multimodal Storytelling: Performance and Inscription in the Narration of Art History
14(17)
Fiona J. Doloughan
A Multimodal Approach to Mind Style: Semiotic Metaphor vs. Multimodal Conceptual Metaphor
31(19)
Rocio Montoro
The Computer-Based Analysis of Narrative and Multimodality
50(15)
Andrew Salway
Opera: Forever and Always Multimodal
65(13)
Michael Hutcheon
Linda Hutcheon
Word-Image/Utterance-Gesture: Case Studies in Multimodal Storytelling
78(21)
David Herman
``I Contain Multitudes'': Narrative Multimodality and the Book that Bleeds
99(16)
Alison Gibbons
Multimodality and the Literary Text: Making Sense of Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
115(12)
Nina Nørgaard
Electronic Multimodal Narratives and Literary Form
127(15)
Michael Toolan
Gains and Losses? Writing it All Down: Fanfiction and Multimodality
142(13)
Bronwen Thomas
Respiratory Narrative: Multimodality and Cybernetic Corporeality in ``Physio-Cybertext''
155(11)
Astrid Ensslin
Cruising Along: Time in Ankerson and Sapnar
166(17)
Jessica Laccetti
Beyond Multimedia, Narrative, and Game: The Contributions of Multimodality and Polymorphic Fictions
183(19)
Christy Dena
Keg Party Extreme and Conversation Party: Two Multimodal Interactive Narratives Developed for the Smallab
202(15)
Sarah Hatton
Melissa Mcgurgan
Xiang-Jun Wang
Coda/Prelude: Eighteen Questions for the Study of Narrative and Multimodality
217(4)
David Herman
Ruth Page
Contributors 221(4)
Index 225
Ruth Page is a Reader in the School of English at Birmingham City University. She is the author of Literary and Linguistic Approaches to Feminist Narratology (Palgrave, 2006), and co-editor of New Narratives: Stories and Storytelling in the Digital Age (UNP, forthcoming).