Born Dancer
I can't go for that
i promised i would post these up, those doing pomo should know these already but probably helpful to know and to use as a checklist for your essay, particularly if you are integrating the texts by the techniques they use.
Non-Traditional or Non-Linear Structure
This includes use of a poly-temporal time structure where several time frames run at once. This is evident in texts like Orlando, where the protagonist seemingly lives for 400 years.
Self Reflexivity
where texts point out their fictional nature - a good example is in an episode of the simpsons where bart and lisa discuss how unusual / abnormal it would be for someone to have five fingers
Hybrid Structure (including use of techniques such as Pastiche and Bricolage)
easily explained, used in Possession which is a collection of letters, memoirs etc, and used in FLW also with the epigraphs at the beginning of each chapter
authorial knowingness
This can be used in two ways - one, as an example of irony, where the author writes in the "god-like" convention of most texts, and combines knowingness with non-omniscient narration. The second is where the author knows more than the timeframe of the story. for example, in FLW, fowles says :had they but been able to see into the future! For Ernestina was to outlive all her generation
Irony
Pretty self explanatory, but present in Orlando: in the opening scenes we are presented with an androgynous character; it is difficult to determine the sex of orlando, and the narrator ironically states: “he, for there can be no doubt about his sex”
Multi – Voiced Narratives
Also self -explanatory, pomo texts can often be told from the viewpoint of multiple characters / perspectives, reinforces the "no one truth" idea.
Fluid Identity
Obvious in FLW, where Sarah is a pastiche of female stereotypes. she is a woman of a clouded past, sexually deviant, the "fallen eve", the virgin, even the mother.
Existentialism
A key belief of pomo, expressed when characters take control of their destiny.
Cynicism
often present through authorial intrusion, where, for example, an author may criticise his/her characters for their moral faults.
Non-Omniscient Narration
where an author appears to have no control over his / her characters, including not knowing what they are thinking. again, in FLW: "When Charles left Sarah on her cliff-edge, I ordered him to walk straight back to Lyme Regis. But he did not; he gratuitously turned and went down to the Dairy.”
Blurring of Boundaries (known as Simulacra)
coined by Baudrillard. Generally refers to the blurring of reality and fiction (apparent when fowles is on the train with charles towards the end of FLW) but can refer to any blurring of distinction - eg in Orlando, there is a blurring between sex and gender, and the forms of film and novel (the division of the film into chapters)
Challenging of Meta Narratives
coined by Lyotard. A challenging of "truths" including class, gender, religion etc. Also extends to the challenge of literary conventions. Something which you will find in pretty much any postmodern text.
feel free to add to the list or to any individual definitions.
sorry they are brief, im a bit rushed.
Non-Traditional or Non-Linear Structure
This includes use of a poly-temporal time structure where several time frames run at once. This is evident in texts like Orlando, where the protagonist seemingly lives for 400 years.
Self Reflexivity
where texts point out their fictional nature - a good example is in an episode of the simpsons where bart and lisa discuss how unusual / abnormal it would be for someone to have five fingers
Hybrid Structure (including use of techniques such as Pastiche and Bricolage)
easily explained, used in Possession which is a collection of letters, memoirs etc, and used in FLW also with the epigraphs at the beginning of each chapter
authorial knowingness
This can be used in two ways - one, as an example of irony, where the author writes in the "god-like" convention of most texts, and combines knowingness with non-omniscient narration. The second is where the author knows more than the timeframe of the story. for example, in FLW, fowles says :had they but been able to see into the future! For Ernestina was to outlive all her generation
Irony
Pretty self explanatory, but present in Orlando: in the opening scenes we are presented with an androgynous character; it is difficult to determine the sex of orlando, and the narrator ironically states: “he, for there can be no doubt about his sex”
Multi – Voiced Narratives
Also self -explanatory, pomo texts can often be told from the viewpoint of multiple characters / perspectives, reinforces the "no one truth" idea.
Fluid Identity
Obvious in FLW, where Sarah is a pastiche of female stereotypes. she is a woman of a clouded past, sexually deviant, the "fallen eve", the virgin, even the mother.
Existentialism
A key belief of pomo, expressed when characters take control of their destiny.
Cynicism
often present through authorial intrusion, where, for example, an author may criticise his/her characters for their moral faults.
Non-Omniscient Narration
where an author appears to have no control over his / her characters, including not knowing what they are thinking. again, in FLW: "When Charles left Sarah on her cliff-edge, I ordered him to walk straight back to Lyme Regis. But he did not; he gratuitously turned and went down to the Dairy.”
Blurring of Boundaries (known as Simulacra)
coined by Baudrillard. Generally refers to the blurring of reality and fiction (apparent when fowles is on the train with charles towards the end of FLW) but can refer to any blurring of distinction - eg in Orlando, there is a blurring between sex and gender, and the forms of film and novel (the division of the film into chapters)
Challenging of Meta Narratives
coined by Lyotard. A challenging of "truths" including class, gender, religion etc. Also extends to the challenge of literary conventions. Something which you will find in pretty much any postmodern text.
feel free to add to the list or to any individual definitions.
sorry they are brief, im a bit rushed.