:: year 22, Issue 77 (12-2014) ::
Persian Language and Literature 2014, 22(77): 215-238 Back to browse issues page
From the Narrator Addressee to the Narrative Addressee (With a Glance at the narratives of Shahnameh)
Qolam Ali Fallah 1, Farzad Balou
1- , fallah@khu.ac.ir
Abstract:   (6499 Views)

Narratologists often make a distinction between classical and modern narratives and contend that classical fiction mainly focuses on characteristics such as the intention of the author, the single and fixed meaning of the narrative, and its closure. In contrast, in modern fiction certain other elements are emphasized like the centrality of the reader, lack of closure, plurality of meaning, and intertextuality. However, with a glance at some classical texts like Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh this distinction can be challenged. For example, Ferdowsi employs certain mythological and symbolic narratives in his epic which had no place in classical literature and at the same time he warns the reader not to restrict himself to the surface meaning of the story. Thus he lifts the addressee to narrative addressee and makes his stories open-ended and open to interpretation

Keywords: epic, mythological themes, dialogism, intertextuality
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Type of Study: Research |


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year 22, Issue 77 (12-2014) Back to browse issues page