Affiliation:
1. University of Tübingen
Abstract
Abstract
In this paper, I attempt a bridge between linguistics, in particular text pragmatics, and school reading of
literary texts. I propose a linguistic model of these peculiarities of the reading of literary texts, especially poetry, that have
been called ‘aesthetic reading’, arguing that a linguistically founded basis is what is lacking for school engagement with (not
only literary) texts. In the last years there has been extensive research on the linguistics-literature interface; however, what
is surprisingly still missing, is a consistent linguistic model of literary reading. In this paper, I propose such a model and show
that ‘aesthetic reading’ involves a distinct reading strategy that can be captured in terms of text-world-models and the
differentiation between coherence and text sense displaying. Consciously reading poetry amounts, linguistically seen, to a close
reading (i) especially focusing marked expressions, i.e., deviations from phonological, morphological, syntactic, semantic and
textpragmatic routines, (ii) maintaining of unsolved ambiguities and thus (iii) generating an array of ‘authorized inferences’
that can be productively used for a principled plurality of interpretations. I specify this proposal and illustrate it with two
cases of marked pronominal reference, arguing that my proposal has some important implications that make it particularly suitable
for school context.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science