Unreliability and Narrator Types. On the Application Area of ›Unreliable Narration‹

IF 0.6 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM Journal of Literary Theory Pub Date : 2018-03-26 DOI:10.1515/jlt-2018-0002
Janina Jacke
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As I will argue, these phenomena are very heterogeneous, and we must distinguish at least five basic types of unreliability whose application areas partially differ:(1) fact-related utterance unreliability: the narrator’s claims about story world facts are false or in a relevant sense incomplete,(2) fact-related cognitive unreliability: the narrator’s beliefs about story world facts are false or in a relevant sense incomplete,(3) value-related utterance unreliability: the narrator’s evaluative utterances are in conflict with a relevant value system,(4) value-related cognitive unreliability: the narrator’s evaluative opinions are in conflict with a relevant value system, and(5) value-related actional unreliability: the narrator’s actions are in conflict with a relevant value system. In the third section of the paper, I will then proceed to show that four kinds of narrator types have been conflated or confused in the application area debate:(a) heterodiegetic narrators: narrators who are not part of the narrated story world,(b) non-personal narrators: narrators of whom we know no features apart from them telling a story, or narrators whom we are not invited to picture,(c) all-knowing narrators: narrators who have complete knowledge of the story world facts, and(d) stipulating narrators: narrators who generate the story world facts by narrating them. In discussions concerning the question of whether one or more of these narrator types cannot be unreliable, some theorists seem to assume that some or all of these types are necessarily connected. I will show, however, that there are hardly any necessary connections between them. 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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Abstract The narratological concept of unreliable narration is subject to constant debate. While this debate affects different kinds of problems associated with unreliability, one of the central issues concerns the application area of ›unreliable narration‹. Here, theorists discuss, for example, whether there are certain types of narrators that cannot be unreliable, whether some kinds of narrators are necessarily unreliable, or in which way other characters apart from narrators can also be unreliable. It is the first one of these questions that I am addressing in this paper: Are there types of narrators that cannot be unreliable? As I lay out in the first section of my paper, my argumentative starting point is the observation that previous contributions to the application area discussion neglect two basic theoretical distinctions that are necessary to find robust and detailed answers to the relevant questions. The first of these theoretical distinctions will be addressed in the second section of the paper. It concerns the narrative phenomena that are usually referred to as »unreliable narration«. As I will argue, these phenomena are very heterogeneous, and we must distinguish at least five basic types of unreliability whose application areas partially differ:(1) fact-related utterance unreliability: the narrator’s claims about story world facts are false or in a relevant sense incomplete,(2) fact-related cognitive unreliability: the narrator’s beliefs about story world facts are false or in a relevant sense incomplete,(3) value-related utterance unreliability: the narrator’s evaluative utterances are in conflict with a relevant value system,(4) value-related cognitive unreliability: the narrator’s evaluative opinions are in conflict with a relevant value system, and(5) value-related actional unreliability: the narrator’s actions are in conflict with a relevant value system. In the third section of the paper, I will then proceed to show that four kinds of narrator types have been conflated or confused in the application area debate:(a) heterodiegetic narrators: narrators who are not part of the narrated story world,(b) non-personal narrators: narrators of whom we know no features apart from them telling a story, or narrators whom we are not invited to picture,(c) all-knowing narrators: narrators who have complete knowledge of the story world facts, and(d) stipulating narrators: narrators who generate the story world facts by narrating them. In discussions concerning the question of whether one or more of these narrator types cannot be unreliable, some theorists seem to assume that some or all of these types are necessarily connected. I will show, however, that there are hardly any necessary connections between them. After this preparatory work, I am showing in a step-by-step analysis in section four which of these narrators types can or cannot be unreliable in which way – and why. The results are as follows: Both heterodiegetic and stipulating narrators can be unreliable in all of the five ways outlined in section two. This outcome may seem surprising for the case of stipulating narrators. It becomes more comprehensible, however, if we bear in mind that only fact-related utterance unreliability is really impugned by a narrator’s ability to create facts by narrating them – and even here we can find a case where unreliability is very likely possible: the case of narratorial self-correction. All-knowing narrators, however, can only be unreliable in four of the five ways: It is, for conceptual reasons, impossible that all-knowing narrators are unreliable on the cognitive level with regards to the story world facts. Since they have complete knowledge of the story world facts, they cannot be wrong or ignorant about them. The case of non-personal narrators, finally, is the most complex. Here, it may first seem that non-personal narrators can never be unreliable – because as soon as a narrator is unreliable, we would know one significant feature of theirs, namely their being unreliable, which makes them personal. However, I will argue that, according to one reading of the non-personality concept, this type of narrator can in fact be unreliable on the utterance level both with regards to facts and values. This is because neither two conflicting reports by the same narrator nor the occurrence of problematic evaluative utterances in a narration – while often being sufficient for fact-related or value-related utterance unreliability respectively – necessarily invite us to picture a narrator. I am closing my paper in section five by summarizing the results and pointing to some possibly debatable theoretical assumptions on which my analyses are based.
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不可靠性和叙述者类型。论“不可靠叙述”的应用领域
摘要不可靠叙述的叙事学概念一直是争论的焦点。虽然这场辩论影响了与不可靠性相关的各种问题,但核心问题之一涉及“不可靠叙述”的应用领域。在这里,理论家们讨论,例如,是否存在某些类型的叙述者是不可靠的,是否某些类型的叙述者一定是不可靠的,或者在哪些情况下,除了叙述者之外的其他角色也可能是不可靠的。这是我在本文中要解决的第一个问题:是否存在不可靠的叙述者类型?正如我在论文的第一部分中所述,我的论证出发点是观察到以前对应用领域讨论的贡献忽略了两个基本的理论区别,这两个区别对于找到相关问题的可靠而详细的答案是必要的。这些理论区别中的第一个将在本文的第二部分中讨论。它涉及通常被称为“不可靠叙述”的叙事现象。正如我将要论证的那样,这些现象是非常异质的,我们必须区分至少五种基本类型的不可靠性,它们的应用领域部分不同:(1)与事实相关的话语不可靠性:叙述者对故事世界事实的主张是错误的或在相关意义上是不完整的;(2)与事实相关的认知不可靠性:叙述者对故事世界事实的信念是错误的或在相关意义上是不完整的;(3)与价值相关的话语不可靠性:(4)与价值相关的认知不可靠性:叙述者的评价意见与相关的价值体系存在冲突;(5)与价值相关的行为不可靠性:叙述者的行为与相关的价值体系存在冲突。在论文的第三部分,我将继续展示四种叙述者类型在应用领域的争论中被混为一谈或混淆:(a)异叙事叙述者:不属于被叙述的故事世界的叙述者;(b)非个人叙述者:除了讲述故事之外我们不知道任何特征的叙述者,或者我们不被邀请描绘的叙述者;(c)全知叙述者:完全了解故事世界事实的叙述者。(d)规定性叙述者:通过叙述产生故事世界事实的叙述者。在讨论这些叙述者类型中的一种或多种是否不可靠的问题时,一些理论家似乎假设这些类型中的一些或所有类型必然是联系在一起的。然而,我要说明的是,它们之间几乎没有任何必然的联系。在这些准备工作之后,我将在第四节中逐步分析这些叙述者类型中哪些可以或不可以在哪些方面不可靠-以及为什么。结果如下:在第二节所述的五种方式中,异质叙事和规定性叙述者都是不可靠的。对于规定叙述者来说,这个结果似乎令人惊讶。然而,如果我们记住,只有与事实相关的话语不可靠,才会受到叙述者通过叙述创造事实的能力的真正质疑——即使在这里,我们也可以找到一个很可能不可靠的例子:叙述自我纠正的例子。然而,无所不知的叙述者只能在五种情况中的四种情况下是不可靠的:由于概念上的原因,无所不知的叙述者在关于故事世界事实的认知层面上是不可靠的。由于他们对故事世界的事实有完全的了解,他们不可能是错误的或无知的。最后,非个人叙述者的情况最为复杂。在这里,首先似乎非个人叙述者永远不可能不可靠——因为一旦一个叙述者不可靠,我们就会知道他们的一个重要特征,即他们的不可靠,这使得他们具有个人色彩。然而,我认为,根据对非人格概念的一种解读,这种类型的叙述者实际上在事实和价值观的话语层面上都是不可靠的。这是因为,无论是同一叙述者的两个相互矛盾的报告,还是叙述者中出现的有问题的评价性话语——尽管它们往往足以分别证明与事实相关或与价值相关的话语不可靠——都不一定会让我们联想到一个叙述者。在论文的第五部分,我总结了结果,并指出了我的分析所基于的一些可能有争议的理论假设。
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来源期刊
Journal of Literary Theory
Journal of Literary Theory LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM-
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