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THE IMPLICATION FORMATIVE POTENTIAL RECEPTIVE AND SEMANTIC POTENTIAL OF SILENCE IN MODERN LITERARY AND MEDICAL DISCOURSE
Author(s) -
Yu. V. Lysanets
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
lìteraturnij proces: metodologìâ, ìmena, tendencìï
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2412-2475
pISSN - 2311-2433
DOI - 10.28925/2412-2475.2019.136
Subject(s) - silence , narrative , theme (computing) , psychology , aesthetics , literature , sociology , linguistics , history , philosophy , art , computer science , operating system
The article aims to analyse the receptive and semantic potential of silence based on the novel “CriticalCondition” (2002) by the contemporary Canadian-American physician, writer Peter Clement. The researchmethodology is based on the application of modern literary studies in the fields of narratology,receptive aesthetics and literary hermeneutics. The theoretical significance of the research consistsin the disclosure of the narrative category of silence in the modern American literary and medicaldiscourse. The results of the study will improve the content of training courses in the world literatureand form a methodological basis for the development of special courses, theme-based seminarsand academic syllabi. In the course of the study, it was found that silence within the analysed literarywork symbolizes the epistemological and communicative crisis of language. The author’s intentionsand receptive resource of silence in the text have been analysed. The leading role of facial expressionsas a means of exteriorizing the silence effect in the “doctor — patient” communicative situation has beenobserved. The patient’s silence in the novel is associated with the author’s rethinking of the phenomenaof illness and disability, thus stimulating the reader to embrace the active position of co-creation andreceptive cooperation by filling-in the narrative “gaps” of the text. Further research is needed to studythe role of the reader’s reception in constructing the silence in the “doctor — patient”communicativesituation, as exemplified by the literary and medical discourse of the US prose.

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