"I have often tried to write myself a pass" : a systemic-functional analysis of discourse in selected African American slave narratives

Autor(en): Pischel de Ascensão, Tobias
Erscheinungsdatum: 2003
Startseite: Online-Ressource (PDF-Datei: VII, 316 Bl., 1,32 MB)
Zusammenfassung: 
This dissertation uses a functional systemic approach to language to examine the construction of the respective first-person narrators of nine of the most popular, commercially successful and therefore influential African American slave narratives published between 1837 and 1862 (Roper, Grandy, Douglass, Brown, Bibb, Northup, Ball, Jacobs, Picquet). This corpus of more than 410,000 words was scanned for various linguistic features such as transitivity of verbs, nominalizations, and several syntactic features. The texts chosen differ as to their methods of production. Some of them were written by the first person narrators themselves, while others were either extensively edited, dictated to an amanuensis, or in some other way controlled. The dialectics of creation and representation through language results in the leading question in this study: how do the first-person slave narrators identify and create a personality for themselves through their texts? This dissertation thus focuses on the linguistic means by which the first-person slave narrator creates what is defined as a discoursal selfʺ, which helped the narrators to achieve one of their most important goals, namely, to be accepted as reliable. The dissertation consists of six chapters...
Beschreibung: 
Osnabrück, Univ., Diss., 2004
Externe URL: https://osnadocs.ub.uni-osnabrueck.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-2004090319
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:gbv:700-2004090319

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