Tense-Switching in Classical Greek: A Cognitive Approach
Explores the relationship between the present tense and the conceptualisation of 'presence' in Greek from a cognitive perspective
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge
Cambridge University Press
2022
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | BSB01 |
Zusammenfassung: | Explores the relationship between the present tense and the conceptualisation of 'presence' in Greek from a cognitive perspective |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (334 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781009050173 |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- I.1 The Meaning of Tense-Switching -- I.1.1 Cognitive Linguistics, Deixis and Viewpoint -- I.1.2 Tense and the Experience of Time -- I.2 Questions and Aims -- I.2.1 The Semantics of Tense-Switching -- I.2.2 Three Usages in Classical Greek -- I.2.2.1 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- I.2.2.2 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- I.2.2.3 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- I.3 Conceptualising Time: Theoretical Background -- I.4 Tense, Aspect and Actionality in Classical Greek -- I.4.1 Tense -- I.4.2 Aspect -- I.4.3 Tense and Grammatical Aspect: Morphological Ambiguity -- I.4.4 Actionality -- I.4.5 Distinguishing Aspect from Actionality -- I.4.6 Takeaways -- I.5 A Note on the Translations -- Chapter 1 General Conceptual Model -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Semantics of the Present Tense -- 1.2.1 Temporal Neutrality -- 1.2.2 Epistemic Immediacy -- 1.3 Bridging the Gap between the Near and the Far: Two Conceptual Scenarios -- 1.3.1 Displacement versus Representation -- 1.3.2 Representations and the Present Tense -- 1.4 On Both Sides of the Fourth Wall: Nineteenth-Century Fiction -- 1.5 Video Footage and Dutch News Narratives -- 1.6 Simulation in a Performed Story -- 1.7 The Discourse as Representation in Classical Greek -- 1.8 Tense-Switching Patterns and the Classical Greek Present -- 1.9 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Methods of Analysis -- 2.1.1.1 Selection of Text Passages -- 2.1.1.2 Trimming the Data -- 2.1.1.3 Interpreting the Statistics -- 2.1.1.4 Summary -- 2.2 Mental Simulation -- 2.2.1 Verb Type -- 2.2.2 Reference to the Limbs -- 2.2.3 First Person versus Third Person | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.2.4 Conclusion -- 2.3 Depiction -- 2.3.1 Speech-Reporting Verbs -- 2.3.2 Conclusion -- 2.4 Linguistic Construal -- 2.4.1 Discourse Time and Story Time -- 2.4.2 Discourse Connection -- 2.4.3 Sentence Complexity -- 2.4.4 Position of the Verb -- 2.4.5 Voice -- 2.4.6 Number -- 2.4.7 Verbal Simplicity -- 2.4.8 Conclusion -- 2.5 Narrative Mimesis and Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.1 Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.2 Conclusion -- 2.6 Case Studies -- 2.6.1 Sophocles, Electra 893-908 and Euripides, Electra 509-19 -- 2.6.2 Euripides, Heracles 963-1012: Heracles' Madness -- 2.6.3 Aristophanes, Wealth 696-747: Asclepius Heals the God of Wealth -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Mimesis, Diegesis and Experientiality -- 3.1.2 Selection of Material -- 3.2 Deixis and the Discourse Space -- 3.2.1 Demonstratives and the Discourse in Classical Greek -- 3.2.2 Narrative Structure: Beginnings and Culminations -- 3.2.3 Introducing Referents -- 3.2.4 Conclusion -- 3.3 Attention-Management Strategies -- 3.3.1 Announcements and Cataphoric Reference -- 3.3.2 Interacting with the Audience -- 3.3.3 Sentence Complexity -- 3.3.4 Particle δή ('Then', 'So') Marking Discourse Progression -- 3.3.5 Conclusion -- 3.4 Changes in the Narrative Dynamic -- 3.4.1 Typology -- 3.4.2 Episodic Structure -- 3.4.3 Narrative Schemas: Corpus Analysis -- 3.4.4 Conclusion -- 3.5 Changes in the Status of Referents -- 3.5.1 Typology -- 3.5.2 Mental Maps -- 3.5.3 Referent Designation: Corpus Analysis -- 3.5.3.1 Coding Material -- 3.5.3.2 Definiteness -- 3.5.4 Conclusion -- 3.6 Case Studies -- 3.6.1 The Adoption of Boeotus in Demosthenes' Against Boeotus 1 and 2 -- 3.6.2 The Beginning of the Peace Process with Philip in Aeschines' On the false embassy and Against Ctesiphon -- 3.6.3 Conclusion -- 3.7 Conclusion | |
505 | 8 | |a Chapter 4 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Where Diegesis Meets 'Registration' -- 4.2 Iconography and Mythography -- 4.2.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.2.2 Conclusion -- 4.3 Chronography -- 4.4 Records of Transactions -- 4.4.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.4.2 Conclusion -- 4.5 Family Tree -- 4.6 Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- A.1 Discourse and the Assertion -- A.1.1 Sequential Order -- A.1.2 Narratorial Comments -- A.1.3 Clause Type -- A.1.4 Repeated or Presupposed Information -- A.1.5 Closely Connected Verbs -- A.1.6 Negation and Other Modifications of the Assertion -- A.1.7 Repeated Occurrences (Iterativity) -- A.2 Aspect and Actionality -- A.2.1 Actionality -- A.2.2 Trimming the Data -- A.2.2.1 Narrative in Drama (Chapter 2) -- A.2.2.2 Historiography (Chapter 3) -- References -- Primary Literary Sources -- Aeschines (Aeschin.) -- Aeschylus (A.) -- Andocides (And.) -- Aristophanes (Ar.) -- Aristotle -- Caro, Robert A. -- (pseudo-)Demetrius -- Demosthenes (D.) -- Dinarchus (Din.) -- Dionysius of Halicarnassus -- Dumas, Alexandre -- Euripides (E.) -- Herodotus (Hdt.) -- Hughes, Thomas H. -- Hyperides (Hyp.) -- Isaeus (Is.) -- Isocrates (Isoc.) -- (pseudo-)Longinus -- Lycurgus (Lycurg.) -- Lysias (Lys.) -- Menander (Men.) -- Parian Chronicle -- Pherecydes -- Plato (Pl.) -- Shakespeare, William -- Sophocles (S.) -- Theophrastus -- Thucydides (Th.) -- Vergil -- Wodehouse, Pelham G. -- Xenophon (X.) -- Primary Popular Media Sources -- Secondary Sources -- Index Locorum -- Index | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Nijk, Arjan A. |
author_GND | (DE-588)1252629761 |
author_facet | Nijk, Arjan A. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Nijk, Arjan A. |
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bvnumber | BV048935084 |
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contents | Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- I.1 The Meaning of Tense-Switching -- I.1.1 Cognitive Linguistics, Deixis and Viewpoint -- I.1.2 Tense and the Experience of Time -- I.2 Questions and Aims -- I.2.1 The Semantics of Tense-Switching -- I.2.2 Three Usages in Classical Greek -- I.2.2.1 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- I.2.2.2 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- I.2.2.3 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- I.3 Conceptualising Time: Theoretical Background -- I.4 Tense, Aspect and Actionality in Classical Greek -- I.4.1 Tense -- I.4.2 Aspect -- I.4.3 Tense and Grammatical Aspect: Morphological Ambiguity -- I.4.4 Actionality -- I.4.5 Distinguishing Aspect from Actionality -- I.4.6 Takeaways -- I.5 A Note on the Translations -- Chapter 1 General Conceptual Model -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Semantics of the Present Tense -- 1.2.1 Temporal Neutrality -- 1.2.2 Epistemic Immediacy -- 1.3 Bridging the Gap between the Near and the Far: Two Conceptual Scenarios -- 1.3.1 Displacement versus Representation -- 1.3.2 Representations and the Present Tense -- 1.4 On Both Sides of the Fourth Wall: Nineteenth-Century Fiction -- 1.5 Video Footage and Dutch News Narratives -- 1.6 Simulation in a Performed Story -- 1.7 The Discourse as Representation in Classical Greek -- 1.8 Tense-Switching Patterns and the Classical Greek Present -- 1.9 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Methods of Analysis -- 2.1.1.1 Selection of Text Passages -- 2.1.1.2 Trimming the Data -- 2.1.1.3 Interpreting the Statistics -- 2.1.1.4 Summary -- 2.2 Mental Simulation -- 2.2.1 Verb Type -- 2.2.2 Reference to the Limbs -- 2.2.3 First Person versus Third Person 2.2.4 Conclusion -- 2.3 Depiction -- 2.3.1 Speech-Reporting Verbs -- 2.3.2 Conclusion -- 2.4 Linguistic Construal -- 2.4.1 Discourse Time and Story Time -- 2.4.2 Discourse Connection -- 2.4.3 Sentence Complexity -- 2.4.4 Position of the Verb -- 2.4.5 Voice -- 2.4.6 Number -- 2.4.7 Verbal Simplicity -- 2.4.8 Conclusion -- 2.5 Narrative Mimesis and Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.1 Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.2 Conclusion -- 2.6 Case Studies -- 2.6.1 Sophocles, Electra 893-908 and Euripides, Electra 509-19 -- 2.6.2 Euripides, Heracles 963-1012: Heracles' Madness -- 2.6.3 Aristophanes, Wealth 696-747: Asclepius Heals the God of Wealth -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Mimesis, Diegesis and Experientiality -- 3.1.2 Selection of Material -- 3.2 Deixis and the Discourse Space -- 3.2.1 Demonstratives and the Discourse in Classical Greek -- 3.2.2 Narrative Structure: Beginnings and Culminations -- 3.2.3 Introducing Referents -- 3.2.4 Conclusion -- 3.3 Attention-Management Strategies -- 3.3.1 Announcements and Cataphoric Reference -- 3.3.2 Interacting with the Audience -- 3.3.3 Sentence Complexity -- 3.3.4 Particle δή ('Then', 'So') Marking Discourse Progression -- 3.3.5 Conclusion -- 3.4 Changes in the Narrative Dynamic -- 3.4.1 Typology -- 3.4.2 Episodic Structure -- 3.4.3 Narrative Schemas: Corpus Analysis -- 3.4.4 Conclusion -- 3.5 Changes in the Status of Referents -- 3.5.1 Typology -- 3.5.2 Mental Maps -- 3.5.3 Referent Designation: Corpus Analysis -- 3.5.3.1 Coding Material -- 3.5.3.2 Definiteness -- 3.5.4 Conclusion -- 3.6 Case Studies -- 3.6.1 The Adoption of Boeotus in Demosthenes' Against Boeotus 1 and 2 -- 3.6.2 The Beginning of the Peace Process with Philip in Aeschines' On the false embassy and Against Ctesiphon -- 3.6.3 Conclusion -- 3.7 Conclusion Chapter 4 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Where Diegesis Meets 'Registration' -- 4.2 Iconography and Mythography -- 4.2.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.2.2 Conclusion -- 4.3 Chronography -- 4.4 Records of Transactions -- 4.4.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.4.2 Conclusion -- 4.5 Family Tree -- 4.6 Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- A.1 Discourse and the Assertion -- A.1.1 Sequential Order -- A.1.2 Narratorial Comments -- A.1.3 Clause Type -- A.1.4 Repeated or Presupposed Information -- A.1.5 Closely Connected Verbs -- A.1.6 Negation and Other Modifications of the Assertion -- A.1.7 Repeated Occurrences (Iterativity) -- A.2 Aspect and Actionality -- A.2.1 Actionality -- A.2.2 Trimming the Data -- A.2.2.1 Narrative in Drama (Chapter 2) -- A.2.2.2 Historiography (Chapter 3) -- References -- Primary Literary Sources -- Aeschines (Aeschin.) -- Aeschylus (A.) -- Andocides (And.) -- Aristophanes (Ar.) -- Aristotle -- Caro, Robert A. -- (pseudo-)Demetrius -- Demosthenes (D.) -- Dinarchus (Din.) -- Dionysius of Halicarnassus -- Dumas, Alexandre -- Euripides (E.) -- Herodotus (Hdt.) -- Hughes, Thomas H. -- Hyperides (Hyp.) -- Isaeus (Is.) -- Isocrates (Isoc.) -- (pseudo-)Longinus -- Lycurgus (Lycurg.) -- Lysias (Lys.) -- Menander (Men.) -- Parian Chronicle -- Pherecydes -- Plato (Pl.) -- Shakespeare, William -- Sophocles (S.) -- Theophrastus -- Thucydides (Th.) -- Vergil -- Wodehouse, Pelham G. -- Xenophon (X.) -- Primary Popular Media Sources -- Secondary Sources -- Index Locorum -- Index |
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Cognitive Approach</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="1"><subfield code="a">Cambridge</subfield><subfield code="b">Cambridge University Press</subfield><subfield code="c">2022</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="264" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="c">©2021</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 Online-Ressource (334 Seiten)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- 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Displacement versus Representation -- 1.3.2 Representations and the Present Tense -- 1.4 On Both Sides of the Fourth Wall: Nineteenth-Century Fiction -- 1.5 Video Footage and Dutch News Narratives -- 1.6 Simulation in a Performed Story -- 1.7 The Discourse as Representation in Classical Greek -- 1.8 Tense-Switching Patterns and the Classical Greek Present -- 1.9 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Methods of Analysis -- 2.1.1.1 Selection of Text Passages -- 2.1.1.2 Trimming the Data -- 2.1.1.3 Interpreting the Statistics -- 2.1.1.4 Summary -- 2.2 Mental Simulation -- 2.2.1 Verb Type -- 2.2.2 Reference to the Limbs -- 2.2.3 First Person versus Third Person</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">2.2.4 Conclusion -- 2.3 Depiction -- 2.3.1 Speech-Reporting Verbs -- 2.3.2 Conclusion -- 2.4 Linguistic Construal -- 2.4.1 Discourse Time and Story Time -- 2.4.2 Discourse Connection -- 2.4.3 Sentence Complexity -- 2.4.4 Position of the Verb -- 2.4.5 Voice -- 2.4.6 Number -- 2.4.7 Verbal Simplicity -- 2.4.8 Conclusion -- 2.5 Narrative Mimesis and Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.1 Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.2 Conclusion -- 2.6 Case Studies -- 2.6.1 Sophocles, Electra 893-908 and Euripides, Electra 509-19 -- 2.6.2 Euripides, Heracles 963-1012: Heracles' Madness -- 2.6.3 Aristophanes, Wealth 696-747: Asclepius Heals the God of Wealth -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Mimesis, Diegesis and Experientiality -- 3.1.2 Selection of Material -- 3.2 Deixis and the Discourse Space -- 3.2.1 Demonstratives and the Discourse in Classical Greek -- 3.2.2 Narrative Structure: Beginnings and Culminations -- 3.2.3 Introducing Referents -- 3.2.4 Conclusion -- 3.3 Attention-Management Strategies -- 3.3.1 Announcements and Cataphoric Reference -- 3.3.2 Interacting with the Audience -- 3.3.3 Sentence Complexity -- 3.3.4 Particle 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id | DE-604.BV048935084 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T21:58:07Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:50:20Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781009050173 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034198953 |
oclc_num | 1266203110 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-12 |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource (334 Seiten) |
psigel | ZDB-1-PQC ZDB-30-PQE gbd_1 ZDB-1-PQC BSB_PDA_PQC |
publishDate | 2022 |
publishDateSearch | 2022 |
publishDateSort | 2022 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Nijk, Arjan A. Verfasser (DE-588)1252629761 aut Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2022 ©2021 1 Online-Ressource (334 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- I.1 The Meaning of Tense-Switching -- I.1.1 Cognitive Linguistics, Deixis and Viewpoint -- I.1.2 Tense and the Experience of Time -- I.2 Questions and Aims -- I.2.1 The Semantics of Tense-Switching -- I.2.2 Three Usages in Classical Greek -- I.2.2.1 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- I.2.2.2 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- I.2.2.3 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- I.3 Conceptualising Time: Theoretical Background -- I.4 Tense, Aspect and Actionality in Classical Greek -- I.4.1 Tense -- I.4.2 Aspect -- I.4.3 Tense and Grammatical Aspect: Morphological Ambiguity -- I.4.4 Actionality -- I.4.5 Distinguishing Aspect from Actionality -- I.4.6 Takeaways -- I.5 A Note on the Translations -- Chapter 1 General Conceptual Model -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Semantics of the Present Tense -- 1.2.1 Temporal Neutrality -- 1.2.2 Epistemic Immediacy -- 1.3 Bridging the Gap between the Near and the Far: Two Conceptual Scenarios -- 1.3.1 Displacement versus Representation -- 1.3.2 Representations and the Present Tense -- 1.4 On Both Sides of the Fourth Wall: Nineteenth-Century Fiction -- 1.5 Video Footage and Dutch News Narratives -- 1.6 Simulation in a Performed Story -- 1.7 The Discourse as Representation in Classical Greek -- 1.8 Tense-Switching Patterns and the Classical Greek Present -- 1.9 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Methods of Analysis -- 2.1.1.1 Selection of Text Passages -- 2.1.1.2 Trimming the Data -- 2.1.1.3 Interpreting the Statistics -- 2.1.1.4 Summary -- 2.2 Mental Simulation -- 2.2.1 Verb Type -- 2.2.2 Reference to the Limbs -- 2.2.3 First Person versus Third Person 2.2.4 Conclusion -- 2.3 Depiction -- 2.3.1 Speech-Reporting Verbs -- 2.3.2 Conclusion -- 2.4 Linguistic Construal -- 2.4.1 Discourse Time and Story Time -- 2.4.2 Discourse Connection -- 2.4.3 Sentence Complexity -- 2.4.4 Position of the Verb -- 2.4.5 Voice -- 2.4.6 Number -- 2.4.7 Verbal Simplicity -- 2.4.8 Conclusion -- 2.5 Narrative Mimesis and Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.1 Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.2 Conclusion -- 2.6 Case Studies -- 2.6.1 Sophocles, Electra 893-908 and Euripides, Electra 509-19 -- 2.6.2 Euripides, Heracles 963-1012: Heracles' Madness -- 2.6.3 Aristophanes, Wealth 696-747: Asclepius Heals the God of Wealth -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Mimesis, Diegesis and Experientiality -- 3.1.2 Selection of Material -- 3.2 Deixis and the Discourse Space -- 3.2.1 Demonstratives and the Discourse in Classical Greek -- 3.2.2 Narrative Structure: Beginnings and Culminations -- 3.2.3 Introducing Referents -- 3.2.4 Conclusion -- 3.3 Attention-Management Strategies -- 3.3.1 Announcements and Cataphoric Reference -- 3.3.2 Interacting with the Audience -- 3.3.3 Sentence Complexity -- 3.3.4 Particle δή ('Then', 'So') Marking Discourse Progression -- 3.3.5 Conclusion -- 3.4 Changes in the Narrative Dynamic -- 3.4.1 Typology -- 3.4.2 Episodic Structure -- 3.4.3 Narrative Schemas: Corpus Analysis -- 3.4.4 Conclusion -- 3.5 Changes in the Status of Referents -- 3.5.1 Typology -- 3.5.2 Mental Maps -- 3.5.3 Referent Designation: Corpus Analysis -- 3.5.3.1 Coding Material -- 3.5.3.2 Definiteness -- 3.5.4 Conclusion -- 3.6 Case Studies -- 3.6.1 The Adoption of Boeotus in Demosthenes' Against Boeotus 1 and 2 -- 3.6.2 The Beginning of the Peace Process with Philip in Aeschines' On the false embassy and Against Ctesiphon -- 3.6.3 Conclusion -- 3.7 Conclusion Chapter 4 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Where Diegesis Meets 'Registration' -- 4.2 Iconography and Mythography -- 4.2.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.2.2 Conclusion -- 4.3 Chronography -- 4.4 Records of Transactions -- 4.4.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.4.2 Conclusion -- 4.5 Family Tree -- 4.6 Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- A.1 Discourse and the Assertion -- A.1.1 Sequential Order -- A.1.2 Narratorial Comments -- A.1.3 Clause Type -- A.1.4 Repeated or Presupposed Information -- A.1.5 Closely Connected Verbs -- A.1.6 Negation and Other Modifications of the Assertion -- A.1.7 Repeated Occurrences (Iterativity) -- A.2 Aspect and Actionality -- A.2.1 Actionality -- A.2.2 Trimming the Data -- A.2.2.1 Narrative in Drama (Chapter 2) -- A.2.2.2 Historiography (Chapter 3) -- References -- Primary Literary Sources -- Aeschines (Aeschin.) -- Aeschylus (A.) -- Andocides (And.) -- Aristophanes (Ar.) -- Aristotle -- Caro, Robert A. -- (pseudo-)Demetrius -- Demosthenes (D.) -- Dinarchus (Din.) -- Dionysius of Halicarnassus -- Dumas, Alexandre -- Euripides (E.) -- Herodotus (Hdt.) -- Hughes, Thomas H. -- Hyperides (Hyp.) -- Isaeus (Is.) -- Isocrates (Isoc.) -- (pseudo-)Longinus -- Lycurgus (Lycurg.) -- Lysias (Lys.) -- Menander (Men.) -- Parian Chronicle -- Pherecydes -- Plato (Pl.) -- Shakespeare, William -- Sophocles (S.) -- Theophrastus -- Thucydides (Th.) -- Vergil -- Wodehouse, Pelham G. -- Xenophon (X.) -- Primary Popular Media Sources -- Secondary Sources -- Index Locorum -- Index Explores the relationship between the present tense and the conceptualisation of 'presence' in Greek from a cognitive perspective Greek language-Tense Tempus (DE-588)4059446-4 gnd rswk-swf Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 gnd rswk-swf Electronic books Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 s Tempus (DE-588)4059446-4 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Nijk, Arjan A. Tense-Switching in Classical Greek Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,c2022 9781316517154 |
spellingShingle | Nijk, Arjan A. Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- I.1 The Meaning of Tense-Switching -- I.1.1 Cognitive Linguistics, Deixis and Viewpoint -- I.1.2 Tense and the Experience of Time -- I.2 Questions and Aims -- I.2.1 The Semantics of Tense-Switching -- I.2.2 Three Usages in Classical Greek -- I.2.2.1 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- I.2.2.2 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- I.2.2.3 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- I.3 Conceptualising Time: Theoretical Background -- I.4 Tense, Aspect and Actionality in Classical Greek -- I.4.1 Tense -- I.4.2 Aspect -- I.4.3 Tense and Grammatical Aspect: Morphological Ambiguity -- I.4.4 Actionality -- I.4.5 Distinguishing Aspect from Actionality -- I.4.6 Takeaways -- I.5 A Note on the Translations -- Chapter 1 General Conceptual Model -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Semantics of the Present Tense -- 1.2.1 Temporal Neutrality -- 1.2.2 Epistemic Immediacy -- 1.3 Bridging the Gap between the Near and the Far: Two Conceptual Scenarios -- 1.3.1 Displacement versus Representation -- 1.3.2 Representations and the Present Tense -- 1.4 On Both Sides of the Fourth Wall: Nineteenth-Century Fiction -- 1.5 Video Footage and Dutch News Narratives -- 1.6 Simulation in a Performed Story -- 1.7 The Discourse as Representation in Classical Greek -- 1.8 Tense-Switching Patterns and the Classical Greek Present -- 1.9 Conclusion -- Chapter 2 Scenic Narrative and the Mimetic Present -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.1.1 Methods of Analysis -- 2.1.1.1 Selection of Text Passages -- 2.1.1.2 Trimming the Data -- 2.1.1.3 Interpreting the Statistics -- 2.1.1.4 Summary -- 2.2 Mental Simulation -- 2.2.1 Verb Type -- 2.2.2 Reference to the Limbs -- 2.2.3 First Person versus Third Person 2.2.4 Conclusion -- 2.3 Depiction -- 2.3.1 Speech-Reporting Verbs -- 2.3.2 Conclusion -- 2.4 Linguistic Construal -- 2.4.1 Discourse Time and Story Time -- 2.4.2 Discourse Connection -- 2.4.3 Sentence Complexity -- 2.4.4 Position of the Verb -- 2.4.5 Voice -- 2.4.6 Number -- 2.4.7 Verbal Simplicity -- 2.4.8 Conclusion -- 2.5 Narrative Mimesis and Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.1 Communicative Dynamism -- 2.5.2 Conclusion -- 2.6 Case Studies -- 2.6.1 Sophocles, Electra 893-908 and Euripides, Electra 509-19 -- 2.6.2 Euripides, Heracles 963-1012: Heracles' Madness -- 2.6.3 Aristophanes, Wealth 696-747: Asclepius Heals the God of Wealth -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Chapter 3 Summary Narrative and the Diegetic Present -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.1.1 Mimesis, Diegesis and Experientiality -- 3.1.2 Selection of Material -- 3.2 Deixis and the Discourse Space -- 3.2.1 Demonstratives and the Discourse in Classical Greek -- 3.2.2 Narrative Structure: Beginnings and Culminations -- 3.2.3 Introducing Referents -- 3.2.4 Conclusion -- 3.3 Attention-Management Strategies -- 3.3.1 Announcements and Cataphoric Reference -- 3.3.2 Interacting with the Audience -- 3.3.3 Sentence Complexity -- 3.3.4 Particle δή ('Then', 'So') Marking Discourse Progression -- 3.3.5 Conclusion -- 3.4 Changes in the Narrative Dynamic -- 3.4.1 Typology -- 3.4.2 Episodic Structure -- 3.4.3 Narrative Schemas: Corpus Analysis -- 3.4.4 Conclusion -- 3.5 Changes in the Status of Referents -- 3.5.1 Typology -- 3.5.2 Mental Maps -- 3.5.3 Referent Designation: Corpus Analysis -- 3.5.3.1 Coding Material -- 3.5.3.2 Definiteness -- 3.5.4 Conclusion -- 3.6 Case Studies -- 3.6.1 The Adoption of Boeotus in Demosthenes' Against Boeotus 1 and 2 -- 3.6.2 The Beginning of the Peace Process with Philip in Aeschines' On the false embassy and Against Ctesiphon -- 3.6.3 Conclusion -- 3.7 Conclusion Chapter 4 Zero-Degree Narrativity and the Registering Present -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.1.1 Where Diegesis Meets 'Registration' -- 4.2 Iconography and Mythography -- 4.2.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.2.2 Conclusion -- 4.3 Chronography -- 4.4 Records of Transactions -- 4.4.1 Rhetorical Functions -- 4.4.2 Conclusion -- 4.5 Family Tree -- 4.6 Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Appendix -- A.1 Discourse and the Assertion -- A.1.1 Sequential Order -- A.1.2 Narratorial Comments -- A.1.3 Clause Type -- A.1.4 Repeated or Presupposed Information -- A.1.5 Closely Connected Verbs -- A.1.6 Negation and Other Modifications of the Assertion -- A.1.7 Repeated Occurrences (Iterativity) -- A.2 Aspect and Actionality -- A.2.1 Actionality -- A.2.2 Trimming the Data -- A.2.2.1 Narrative in Drama (Chapter 2) -- A.2.2.2 Historiography (Chapter 3) -- References -- Primary Literary Sources -- Aeschines (Aeschin.) -- Aeschylus (A.) -- Andocides (And.) -- Aristophanes (Ar.) -- Aristotle -- Caro, Robert A. -- (pseudo-)Demetrius -- Demosthenes (D.) -- Dinarchus (Din.) -- Dionysius of Halicarnassus -- Dumas, Alexandre -- Euripides (E.) -- Herodotus (Hdt.) -- Hughes, Thomas H. -- Hyperides (Hyp.) -- Isaeus (Is.) -- Isocrates (Isoc.) -- (pseudo-)Longinus -- Lycurgus (Lycurg.) -- Lysias (Lys.) -- Menander (Men.) -- Parian Chronicle -- Pherecydes -- Plato (Pl.) -- Shakespeare, William -- Sophocles (S.) -- Theophrastus -- Thucydides (Th.) -- Vergil -- Wodehouse, Pelham G. -- Xenophon (X.) -- Primary Popular Media Sources -- Secondary Sources -- Index Locorum -- Index Greek language-Tense Tempus (DE-588)4059446-4 gnd Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4059446-4 (DE-588)4113791-7 |
title | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_auth | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_exact_search | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_exact_search_txtP | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_full | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_fullStr | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_full_unstemmed | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek A Cognitive Approach |
title_short | Tense-Switching in Classical Greek |
title_sort | tense switching in classical greek a cognitive approach |
title_sub | A Cognitive Approach |
topic | Greek language-Tense Tempus (DE-588)4059446-4 gnd Griechisch (DE-588)4113791-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Greek language-Tense Tempus Griechisch |
work_keys_str_mv | AT nijkarjana tenseswitchinginclassicalgreekacognitiveapproach |