Implication And Omission In Ernest Hemingway’s "Hills Like White Elephants" Raymond Carver’s "Why Don’t You Dance" Richard Ford’s "Great Falls" And Bobbie Ann Mason’s "Shiloh"
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ernest Hemingway developed the “Theory of Omission” by which he would deploy interrelated techniques of implication and omission with the aim of strengthening the narrative and creating certain effects on readers. To provide additional evidence with respect tohis influence on the leading figures of American literary minimalism, this article argues that the narrators of Raymond Carver’s “Why Don’t you Dance,” Richard Ford’s “Great Falls,” and Bobbie Ann Mason’s “Shiloh” employ the techniques of implication and omission in order to engage readers in the construction of meaning and make them feel more than they understand the emotional reality of the marital dissatisfaction, which is left beneath the surface of things, as does Hemingway in “Hills Like White Elephants.” To this end, the analytical and the comparative study is carried out using Wolfgang’s Iser Reception Theory.
欧内斯特·海明威发展了“省略理论”,通过运用隐含和省略的相互关联的技巧,目的是加强叙事,并对读者产生一定的影响。为了进一步证明他对美国极简主义文学主要人物的影响,本文认为雷蒙德·卡弗的《你为什么不跳舞》、理查德·福特的《大瀑布》的叙述者博比·安·梅森(Bobbie Ann Mason)的《希洛》(Shiloh)运用了暗示和省略的技巧,让读者参与到意义的构建中,让他们感受到婚姻不满意的情感现实,而不是他们所理解的,就像海明威在《白象山》(Hills Like White Elephants)中所做的那样。为此,本文运用沃尔夫冈的伊瑟尔接受理论进行了分析和比较研究。