La narrazione come testo affine
Abstract
A narrative text (narration) is traditionally explained in two main alternative ways.
First explanation: we have a narration when a text is structured in relation to time.
The narrative text is a story, the facts are reported in a sequence. In this sense,
the narration is the opposite of the description, which is essentially static. Second
explanation, we have a narration when a text is structured in relation to reality. In
this second perspective the narrative text is a representation, ranging from concrete
factual descriptions (reports) to unreal fantasy (tales). A third alternative is
argued in this essay: a narration – as it can be intuitively perceived – is a text inducing
affinity (empathy) between the text and the producers (sender/receiver). This
means that all the communicative devices (grammar, rhetoric, prosody, pragmatics
etc.) attract the producers inside the plot and lead them to an identification with
the characters and the situations.