The present article examines the linguistic choices made to refer to walking in Mrs Dalloway. While in an urban environment, walking itself is so elemental that all the characters do so, the linguistic means used by Woolf prove particularly significant. Walking, which is intrinsically dynamic, can thus be referred to via static phrases, or might even not be mentioned at all; conversely, the syntactic and semantic choices can make it appear excessive. Based on a corpus of 134 occurrences taken from all the passages in which a character proceeds along the streets, the study shows that these linguistic choices are not random at all: walking appears as a reflection of the balance or imbalance of the being, whose living force is at grips with a ...
“Walking London” examines a trio of novels in relation to the development of the city of London. I d...
‘I walk, therefore I write’ might be the motto for a group of British writers as otherwise diverse ...
Using the theoretical framework of Geocriticism, Psychogeography, and the literary concepts of the f...
International audienceThe present article examines the linguistic choices made to refer to walking i...
Cet article s’intéresse aux choix linguistiques effectués pour évoquer la marche dans Mrs Dalloway. ...
There are many walks and walkers to be found in Jane Austen's six published novels, and these have a...
The article undertakes the problem of the rhetoric of walking (particularly the way of walking), tra...
This research probes the relevance of literature on walking and meaningfulness placed on walking by...
There are people who, when they travel, wrap themselves up [ ] in silence and suspicion. They travel...
Analysing diverse modes of walking across a wide range of texts from the Enlightenment period and be...
This essay studies the translation of metaphorical concepts and lexical variation in relation to wal...
The emergence of Romantic poetry in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries was instrumen...
The past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist practice tha...
International audienceThe past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist pract...
abstract The past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist practice that stan...
“Walking London” examines a trio of novels in relation to the development of the city of London. I d...
‘I walk, therefore I write’ might be the motto for a group of British writers as otherwise diverse ...
Using the theoretical framework of Geocriticism, Psychogeography, and the literary concepts of the f...
International audienceThe present article examines the linguistic choices made to refer to walking i...
Cet article s’intéresse aux choix linguistiques effectués pour évoquer la marche dans Mrs Dalloway. ...
There are many walks and walkers to be found in Jane Austen's six published novels, and these have a...
The article undertakes the problem of the rhetoric of walking (particularly the way of walking), tra...
This research probes the relevance of literature on walking and meaningfulness placed on walking by...
There are people who, when they travel, wrap themselves up [ ] in silence and suspicion. They travel...
Analysing diverse modes of walking across a wide range of texts from the Enlightenment period and be...
This essay studies the translation of metaphorical concepts and lexical variation in relation to wal...
The emergence of Romantic poetry in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries was instrumen...
The past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist practice tha...
International audienceThe past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist pract...
abstract The past two decades have seen the rise of the walking tour as a tourist practice that stan...
“Walking London” examines a trio of novels in relation to the development of the city of London. I d...
‘I walk, therefore I write’ might be the motto for a group of British writers as otherwise diverse ...
Using the theoretical framework of Geocriticism, Psychogeography, and the literary concepts of the f...