Social Minds in Drama. Golnaz Shams
Golnaz Shams
Social Minds in Drama
The Delineation of Mentalities and Collectives
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Zugl.: Freiburg, Univ., Diss., 2018
Cover illustration : © Zastolskiy Victor/Shutterstock.com
D 25
ISSN 0935-4093
ISBN 978-3-631-81012-5 (Print)
E-ISBN 978-3-631-81900-5 (E-PDF)
E-ISBN 978-3-631-81901-2 (EPUB)
E-ISBN 978-3-631-81902-9 (MOBI)
DOI 10.3726/b16829
© Peter Lang GmbH
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About the author
The Author
Golnaz Shams was born in Tehran. She holds a PhD in English literature. She taught English and German most of her life. Her research has been about Victorian literature and especially on theatre and drama. She is also interested in narratology, theatre studies, and literary theory. She used to stage plays in an amateur theatre group at the ÖKI (Österreichisches Kulturinstitut) in Tehran and also took some acting classes with the late renowned theatre director Hamid Samandarian.
About the book
Golnaz Shams
Social Minds in Drama
This study provides a new model for the construction of mentalities and intermental thought of characters in playscripts. It introduces a model that facilitates the analysis of the construction of consciousness, instances of collective thought, and the dynamics of group formation in late-Victorian drama. It can be placed within the framework of cognitive studies because cognitive studies are interested in examining the mental state and the relationship between minds involved in cognitive interaction in narratives. For a long time narrative studies have neglected drama as a genre and, even after the long overdue acceptance of plays in the family of narratives, most critics were eager to focus on performance rather than on playscripts. This book, introduces a model through which the analysis of playscripts will be rewarding and worthwhile.
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For my mother, the strongest most loving person in my life
Acknowledgements
To my life-coach, my mother: because I owe it all to you. Many Thanks!
I would like to express my special appreciation and thanks to my advisor Prof. Dr. Monika Fludernik. It has been an honour to be her Ph.D. student. I appreciate all her contributions of time, ideas, and funding to make my Ph.D. experience productive and stimulating. I would also like to express my warmest gratitude to my second reader Prof. Dr. Jan Alber. His support and motivation have been essential to this work.
This thesis would not have come to a successful completion without the help I received from my teacher and friend Kian Soheil, who despite his busy schedule always had time to read and proofread my work, providing me with invaluable feedback, moral support and advice. I will forever be thankful.
I especially thank Eva von Contzen, Kerstin Fest, Benjamin Kohlmann and Miriam Nandi to whom I have always looked up to and who have always shared their experience and expertise with me, and did not let me quit when it all felt hopeless.
I am also very much indebted to all my friends who have supported me intellectually and morally, laughed and cried with me, and were always ready to lift my spirits with coffee and chocolate.
Thanks for all your encouragement!
Table of Contents
1.1 Topic and Major Questions
1.2 (Intermentality and) Social Minds
1.3 In What Way Does This Study Go beyond Previous Studies?
Chapter 2 Theoretical Background
2.1 From Classical Narratology to Postclassical and Cognitive Narrative Studies
2.2 Alan Palmer’s Construction of Fictional Minds and Intermentality
2.2.1 Palmer and His Work
2.2.2 Palmer in the Context of Cognitivist Ideas
2.3 The Status of Drama within Narrative Studies
Chapter 3 Character and Consciousness in Drama