Indo-Europeanists interested not only in IE linguistics, but also in IE poetics, also have spent much timDear List,Narratology has roots not only in German scholarship, as Dipak has pointed out. It also has deep roots in Russian semiotics [see Propp, Jakobson, Lotman, Ivanov, and Toporov et al.]. Two important Indologists had deep connections with this school: T. Elizarenkova and Boris Oguibenine, who is, I think, still a member of this list. Narratology was also nurtured by French scholars, influenced by Levi-Strauss and his brand of structuralism.
On Mon, Sep 1, 2014 at 12:53 PM, Dipak Bhattacharya <dipak.d2004@gmail.com> wrote:
1.9.14
German philology has the term Rahmen-erzählung literally 'Frame narration'. I am speaking from unrecorded memory. It was discussed by some acquaintances including me long ago. I do not remember the context and the sequel. It neatly defines the Indian narration structure. This may be probed into. There is no dearth of knowledgeable German friends who might help.
Best
DB
On Mon, Sep 1, 2014 at 4:28 PM, Harsha Dehejia <harshadehejia@hotmail.com> wrote:
Friends:One of my students is working on Narratalogy in the Indian Tradition.While we have enough information on how stories are told, we seem to be lacking information on how stories are structured.Any help would be most helpful.Kind regards,HarshaProf. Harsha V. Dehajia_______________________________________________
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