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- catalog contributor b3440535.
- catalog created "1990.".
- catalog date "1990".
- catalog date "1990.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1990.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references ([95]-103) and indexes.".
- catalog description "Introduction. The first steps of the analysis -- 1. Translation -- 2. Delimitation of the text -- 3. Summary -- Chapter I. "Story" and "Discourse" -- Chapter II. Time -- 1. "Narrative time" and "narration time" -- 2. Order. "analepsis", "prolepsis" -- 3. "Gaps" ("paralipsis") and "blanks" -- 4. Order and time-sequence in Biblical narratives -- 5. Duration -- 6. Frequency -- chapter III. Plot -- 1. Definition -- 2. Types of plots -- 3. Types of unified plots -- 4. Analysis of unif8ed plots or single episodes -- A. formal structure -- B. the different moments of the plot -- C. Labov's model (A. Berlin) -- D. the semiotic model -- 5. Episode and scene -- 6. Conventions and "tuype-scenes" -- Chapter IV. Narrator and reader -- 1. The structure of narrative communication -- A. the structure itself -- B. "real" and "implied author" -- C. narrator and narrate -- D. "real" and "implied reader" -- 2. The narrator -- A. "authority": "omniscient" and "limited narrators" -- B. "dramatized" and "undramatized narrators" -- C. The narrator and the narration: level and relationship -- D. "narrative within a narrative", "embedded narratives" -- E. "telling" and "showing" -- 3. The reader -- A. the three reading positions -- B. knowledge and irony -- C. the reader's interest -- Chapter V. Point of view -- 1. The theory -- A. basic classification -- B. the three major "focalizations" -- 2. Focalization in the Bible -- A. general remarks -- B. indicators of different focalizations -- C. some examples -- D. shifts of "perspectives", especially in theophanies -- 3. More clarifications of the vocabulary -- A. free indirect style -- B. stream of consciousness -- C. the classifications of S. Chatman and B.A. Uspenskij -- 4. Note on the "narrative situations" of F.K. Stanzel -- Chapter VI. Characters -- 1. "Dynamic" and "static" characters -- 2. "Flat" and "round" characters -- 3. "Traits" and "habits" -- 4. Characters and plot -- 5. Characterization of personages -- 6. The semiotic model".
- catalog extent "viii, 129 p. ;".
- catalog identifier "8876535934".
- catalog isPartOf "Subsidia Biblica ; 13".
- catalog issued "1990".
- catalog issued "1990.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Roma : Editrice Pontificio Istituto Biblico,".
- catalog subject "221.6/6 20".
- catalog subject "BS521.7 .S34 1990".
- catalog subject "Bible. Old Testament Criticism, Narrative.".
- catalog subject "Narration in the Bible.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction. The first steps of the analysis -- 1. Translation -- 2. Delimitation of the text -- 3. Summary -- Chapter I. "Story" and "Discourse" -- Chapter II. Time -- 1. "Narrative time" and "narration time" -- 2. Order. "analepsis", "prolepsis" -- 3. "Gaps" ("paralipsis") and "blanks" -- 4. Order and time-sequence in Biblical narratives -- 5. Duration -- 6. Frequency -- chapter III. Plot -- 1. Definition -- 2. Types of plots -- 3. Types of unified plots -- 4. Analysis of unif8ed plots or single episodes -- A. formal structure -- B. the different moments of the plot -- C. Labov's model (A. Berlin) -- D. the semiotic model -- 5. Episode and scene -- 6. Conventions and "tuype-scenes" -- Chapter IV. Narrator and reader -- 1. The structure of narrative communication -- A. the structure itself -- B. "real" and "implied author" -- C. narrator and narrate -- D. "real" and "implied reader" -- 2. The narrator -- A. "authority": "omniscient" and "limited narrators" -- B. "dramatized" and "undramatized narrators" -- C. The narrator and the narration: level and relationship -- D. "narrative within a narrative", "embedded narratives" -- E. "telling" and "showing" -- 3. The reader -- A. the three reading positions -- B. knowledge and irony -- C. the reader's interest -- Chapter V. Point of view -- 1. The theory -- A. basic classification -- B. the three major "focalizations" -- 2. Focalization in the Bible -- A. general remarks -- B. indicators of different focalizations -- C. some examples -- D. shifts of "perspectives", especially in theophanies -- 3. More clarifications of the vocabulary -- A. free indirect style -- B. stream of consciousness -- C. the classifications of S. Chatman and B.A. Uspenskij -- 4. Note on the "narrative situations" of F.K. Stanzel -- Chapter VI. Characters -- 1. "Dynamic" and "static" characters -- 2. "Flat" and "round" characters -- 3. "Traits" and "habits" -- 4. Characters and plot -- 5. Characterization of personages -- 6. The semiotic model".
- catalog title ""Our fathers have told us" : introduction to the analysis of Hebrew narratives / Jean Louis Ska.".
- catalog type "Criticism, interpretation, etc. fast".
- catalog type "text".