List of figures |
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xi | |
List of tables |
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xii | |
Permission acknowledgements |
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xiv | |
Acknowledgements |
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xvii | |
Part I Introducing contemporary stylistics |
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1 Contemporary stylistics |
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3 | (12) |
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3 | (2) |
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1.2 How is it contemporary? |
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5 | (2) |
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1.3 The structure of this book |
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7 | (3) |
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1.4 The principles of stylistic analysis |
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10 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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11 | (4) |
Part II Literature as language |
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15 | (12) |
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2.1 The development and devices of foregrounding |
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15 | (1) |
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2.2 Parallelism and repetition |
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16 | (3) |
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19 | (3) |
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2.4 Foregrounding and character experience |
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22 | (2) |
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24 | (1) |
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25 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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25 | (2) |
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3 Phonemes to sound patterning |
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27 | (15) |
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3.1 Phonology and stylistics |
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27 | (4) |
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3.2 Onomatopoeia, consonance, and assonance |
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31 | (2) |
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3.3 Phonaesthesia and the phonaesthetic fallacy |
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33 | (1) |
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34 | (5) |
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39 | (1) |
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40 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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40 | (2) |
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42 | (14) |
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42 | (3) |
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45 | (2) |
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4.3 Morphological deviations |
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47 | (4) |
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4.4 Morphological play in concrete poetry |
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51 | (3) |
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54 | (1) |
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54 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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55 | (1) |
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56 | (12) |
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5.1 Phrases, clauses, and sentences |
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56 | (2) |
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58 | (2) |
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60 | (3) |
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63 | (3) |
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66 | (1) |
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66 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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67 | (1) |
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6 Register, lexical semantics, and cohesion |
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68 | (15) |
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68 | (3) |
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6.2 Lexical semantics: Synonyms and antonym |
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71 | (2) |
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6.3 Equivalence and opposition |
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73 | (3) |
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76 | (2) |
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78 | (1) |
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79 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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79 | (4) |
Part III Literature as discourse |
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7 Dialogue and spoken discourse |
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83 | (13) |
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7.1 Meaning and context in spoken discourse |
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83 | (2) |
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85 | (4) |
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89 | (1) |
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7.4 Power play in dialogue |
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90 | (4) |
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94 | (1) |
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94 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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95 | (1) |
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8 Speech, thought, and narration |
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96 | (13) |
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8.1 Speech and thought (and writing) |
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96 | (3) |
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8.2 Narrators and free indirect discourse |
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99 | (2) |
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101 | (3) |
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104 | (2) |
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106 | (1) |
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106 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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107 | (2) |
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9 Modality and point of view |
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109 | (12) |
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109 | (4) |
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113 | (1) |
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9.3 Analysing modal shading |
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114 | (4) |
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9.4 Modal shading and point of view |
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118 | (1) |
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119 | (1) |
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119 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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120 | (1) |
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10 Transitivity and ideology |
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121 | (14) |
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10.1 Transitivity and choice |
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121 | (2) |
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10.2 Transitivity categories |
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123 | (5) |
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10.3 Transitivity patterns in longer texts |
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128 | (1) |
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10.4 Gender representation in romance fiction |
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129 | (4) |
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133 | (1) |
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133 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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134 | (1) |
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11 Varieties and invented languages |
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135 | (14) |
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135 | (1) |
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11.2 Strategies for representing linguistic varieties in writing |
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136 | (3) |
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11.3 Style switching in poetry |
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139 | (3) |
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142 | (3) |
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145 | (1) |
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145 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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146 | (3) |
Part IV Text as cognition |
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149 | (13) |
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12.1 Cognitive stylistics |
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149 | (1) |
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150 | (4) |
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12.3 Attraction and neglect |
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154 | (2) |
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12.4 Attention and atmosphere |
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156 | (3) |
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159 | (1) |
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160 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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160 | (2) |
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13 Deixis and deictic shift |
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162 | (13) |
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162 | (2) |
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164 | (3) |
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13.3 Perceptual deixis and projection relations |
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167 | (1) |
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168 | (3) |
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171 | (1) |
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171 | (2) |
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Further Reading and References |
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173 | (2) |
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14 Schemas, scripts, and prototypes |
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175 | (14) |
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14.1 Knowledge: Schemas and scripts |
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175 | (2) |
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14.2 Categorisation: Prototypes |
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177 | (1) |
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14.3 Responding to schema disruption |
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178 | (4) |
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182 | (3) |
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185 | (1) |
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186 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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187 | (2) |
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15 Cognitive grammar and construal |
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189 | (16) |
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15.1 What's cognitive about grammar? |
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189 | (1) |
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15.2 Dimensions of construal |
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190 | (5) |
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15.3 Construal and narrative point of view |
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195 | (3) |
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15.4 Construal and conceptual deviance |
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198 | (1) |
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199 | (1) |
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200 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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200 | (5) |
Part V Reading as mental spaces |
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16 Conceptual metaphor and conceptual integration |
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205 | (16) |
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16.1 Metaphorical cognition and conceptual mapping |
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205 | (3) |
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16.2 Conceptual metaphor and conceptual metonymy in literature |
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208 | (2) |
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16.3 Image-schema metaphors |
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210 | (3) |
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16.4 Interanimation and conceptual integration |
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213 | (4) |
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217 | (1) |
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218 | (2) |
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Further Reading and References |
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220 | (1) |
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221 | (15) |
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17.1 Language, conceptualisation, and Text World Theory |
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221 | (1) |
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17.2 Building and switching text-worlds |
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222 | (4) |
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17.3 Modal-worlds: Attitudes and ontology |
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226 | (5) |
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231 | (3) |
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234 | (1) |
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234 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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235 | (1) |
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236 | (13) |
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236 | (2) |
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18.2 Negation and cognition |
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238 | (2) |
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18.3 Negation and attention |
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240 | (1) |
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241 | (3) |
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244 | (1) |
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245 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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246 | (3) |
Part VI Reading as experience |
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19 Analysing the multimodal text |
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249 | (18) |
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19.1 Modes and multimodality |
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249 | (1) |
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19.2 Analysing multimodal literature |
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250 | (4) |
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19.3 Multimodality and genre |
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254 | (4) |
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19.4 Multimodality and digital fiction |
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258 | (6) |
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264 | (1) |
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264 | (2) |
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Further Reading and References |
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266 | (1) |
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20 Understanding emotions |
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267 | (18) |
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20.1 Emotional involvement in reading |
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267 | (1) |
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20.2 Psychological projection and mind-modelling |
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268 | (2) |
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20.3 Identification and resistance |
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270 | (4) |
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20.4 Narrative perspective and positioning |
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274 | (4) |
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278 | (1) |
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278 | (2) |
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Further Reading and References |
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280 | (5) |
Part VII Reading as data |
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285 | (16) |
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21.1 Corpus linguistics, stylistics, and corpora |
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285 | (1) |
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21.2 Corpus stylistics and word lists |
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286 | (5) |
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21.3 Keywords and keyness |
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291 | (3) |
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21.4 Concordances and collocations |
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294 | (5) |
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299 | (1) |
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299 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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300 | (1) |
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301 | (20) |
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22.1 Collecting data about readers and reading in stylistics |
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301 | (2) |
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303 | (4) |
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307 | (3) |
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22.4 Post-processing: 'Naturalistic' data |
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310 | (4) |
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314 | (2) |
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316 | (1) |
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Further Reading and References |
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317 | (4) |
Part VIII Conclusion |
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321 | (8) |
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321 | (2) |
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323 | (2) |
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23.3 Future directions: Situated contemporary stylistics |
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325 | (4) |
References |
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329 | (38) |
Index |
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367 | |