International audienceThe article focuses on the specific use of the second person pronoun in Iain Banks’s Complicity and the complex relationship it entertains with its first-person counterpart as the novel alternates between first- and second-person narratives. The personal pronouns construct two completely opposed mindstyles: the highly personal narrative of the first-person protagonist contrasts with the depersonalised style of the ‘you’ protagonist-narrator. Not only is the second person pronoun a grammatical ‘imposter’ (Collins & Postal, 2012)—it actually hides an ‘I’—but it is a psychological one as the narrator seems to hide his real self behind a convenient ‘you persona’. In addition, the article brings to light the pragmatic parad...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
Imposters are grammatically third-person expressions used to refer to the firstperson speaker or sec...
International audienceThe article focuses on the specific use of the second person pronoun in Iain B...
International audienceThe idea behind this article comes from an observation: the second-person pron...
International audienceThis article focuses on the communication situation represented in reported in...
The creative work, Pet Names, is eight loosely interrelated narratives. Each narrative depicts the n...
This article focuses on the choice of the second-person pronoun in Paul Auster’s autobiographical wo...
This paper discusses double deixis (i.e. when a deictic form points at two referents simultaneously)...
This chapter investigates pronoun use in Zoë Wicomb’s David’s Story (2001). The narrator is the aman...
Introduction : This chapter explores the readerly deictic shifting involved in processing the pronou...
The article researches the alternation of the types of narrative from the first and third person in ...
“Second person narratives” may often be experimental, but are hardly new. The forms they take today ...
Focusing on Ben Lerner’s 10:04, this chapter investigates the stylistic composition of autofiction, ...
Mulhaüsler and Harré contend that pronoun systems set out fields of expression ‘within which people ...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
Imposters are grammatically third-person expressions used to refer to the firstperson speaker or sec...
International audienceThe article focuses on the specific use of the second person pronoun in Iain B...
International audienceThe idea behind this article comes from an observation: the second-person pron...
International audienceThis article focuses on the communication situation represented in reported in...
The creative work, Pet Names, is eight loosely interrelated narratives. Each narrative depicts the n...
This article focuses on the choice of the second-person pronoun in Paul Auster’s autobiographical wo...
This paper discusses double deixis (i.e. when a deictic form points at two referents simultaneously)...
This chapter investigates pronoun use in Zoë Wicomb’s David’s Story (2001). The narrator is the aman...
Introduction : This chapter explores the readerly deictic shifting involved in processing the pronou...
The article researches the alternation of the types of narrative from the first and third person in ...
“Second person narratives” may often be experimental, but are hardly new. The forms they take today ...
Focusing on Ben Lerner’s 10:04, this chapter investigates the stylistic composition of autofiction, ...
Mulhaüsler and Harré contend that pronoun systems set out fields of expression ‘within which people ...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
The duration of a character's appearance isn't always as limited as the reader would like to think. ...
Imposters are grammatically third-person expressions used to refer to the firstperson speaker or sec...