TY - BOOK AU - BIERI,PETER AU - HAMBURGER,KÄTE AU - HARWEG,ROLAND AU - JANICH,PETER AU - LÄMMERT,EBERHARD AU - MANI,INDERJEET AU - MEISTER,JAN CHRISTOPH AU - Meister,Jan Christoph AU - MÜLLER,GÜNTHER AU - POIDEVIN,ROBIN LE AU - REICHENBACH,HANS AU - Schernus,Wilhelm AU - TORO,ALFONSO DE TI - Time: From Concept to Narrative Construct: A Reader T2 - Narratologia : Contributions to Narrative Theory , SN - 9783110222081 AV - PN56.T5 T56 2011 U1 - 808.84/9384 23 PY - 2011///] CY - Berlin, Boston : PB - De Gruyter, KW - Narration (Rhetoric) KW - Time in literature KW - Time KW - Philosophy KW - Anthologie KW - Narratologie KW - Zeit KW - Zeitkonzept KW - Zeitvorstellung KW - LITERARY CRITICISM / European / General KW - bisacsh KW - Anthology KW - Narrative Theory KW - Time Constructs N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Acknowledgements --; Foreword --; The Tenses of Verbs --; Time Experience and Personhood --; Constituting Time through Action and Discourse --; Time, Tense and Topology --; The Significance of Time in Narrative Art --; The Timelessness of Poetry --; The Time References of Narration --; Time Structure in the Contemporary Novel --; Story-time and Fact-sequence-time --; The Temporality Effect. Towards a Process Model of Narrative Time Construction --; The Flow of Time in Narrative. An Artificial Intelligence Perspective --; Bibliography: A Guide to Further Reading --; Subject Index --; Name Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - The present volume is targeted at an interdisciplinary audience, i.e. partly at literary scholars/narratologists interested in time theory outside their field, and partly at scholars outside literary studies who in turn would like to learn more about such concepts created in narrative theory. The anthology assembles both English-speaking and German contributions to a narrative theory of time constructs which have thus far not been translated into English, but have – directly or indirectly – inspired the theoretical discourse across disciplines. The common methodological focus of the articles assembled here concerns the way in which the experience of chronological structure and ordering in (experienced or imagined) phenomena can be traced back to a logic of time “constructs”. Narrative time constructs – that is: models of chronological ordering which we generate while processing narratively encoded information – constitute a particularly rich body of examples. How we experience time is directly linked to how we narrate information, and how we re-construct principles of temporal ordering in the narrated content. The logic of narrative time constructs has therefore been of interest not only to narrative theory, but also to philosophy and cognitive science, and more recently to computational approaches toward modelling human time experience UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110227185 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783110227185 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783110227185/original ER -