Telling in the plural: From grammar to ideology

Authors
Citation
U. Margolin, Telling in the plural: From grammar to ideology, POETICS TOD, 21(3), 2000, pp. 591-618
Citations number
25
Categorie Soggetti
Language & Linguistics
Journal title
POETICS TODAY
ISSN journal
03335372 → ACNP
Volume
21
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
591 - 618
Database
ISI
SICI code
0333-5372(200023)21:3<591:TITPFG>2.0.ZU;2-U
Abstract
This article aims to provide a definition, description, and typology of col lective narrative agents and of collective narratives. A collective narrati ve agent occurs in a given narrative if three conditions are satisfied: (a) the argument position in numerous narrative propositions is occupied by an expression designating a group of some kind; (b) the predicate position in these propositions is occupied by predicates that designate the group's ho listic attributes or collective actions; (c) the group as such fulfills a r ange of thematic roles in the narrated sequence. A narrative is a collectiv e narrative if a collective narrative agent occupies the protagonist role. The difference between standard and collective narratives resides therefore in the reversal of the usual proportion between individual and collective agents. Not every collection of individuals (e.g., Zola's crowds) qualifies as a collective agent. To qualify, the collection must act as a plural sub ject or we-group, capable of forming shared group intentions and acting on them jointly. A different type of collective agent is a community: a group with a shared sense of identity. At the extreme end stands the group as a c orporate entity, a totally impersonal network of positions and roles that c reates the impression of an independent entity with a will of its own. With respect to individual group members, the narrative adopts a collective perspective on them. The individual is accordingly presented as part of a collectivity of a social self, its actions those of a role bearer within a group, and the relations between any two individuals defined via a plural s ubject category. With respect to the group as a collective narrative agent, the portrayal of its physical, verbal, and metal activities oscillates bet ween two poles: description in group-as-a-whole terms and in individuals-as -group-members terms. Both individual and collective levels exist concurren tly and are irreducible to each other, so that an unresolved tension betwee n the two is a basic feature of collective narration. The tension increases as one moves from the representation of physical action to that of speech, where the employment of direct discourse features for the speech of many i s problematic. The greatest difficulty is encountered on the level of menta l activity or experientiality, because exact inner verbalization varies fro m one group member to another. The article further discusses collective nar rators, narratees, and the appropriation of collective narratives by actual world individuals and groups, using the Passover Haggadah as a primary exa mple.