Event date:

DeSiC Scholarly Meeting, Friday, 27 January 2023, 11.30, room 215

The Department of Studies in Culture invites everyone to its second scholarly meeting on the 27th of January 2023 at 11.30 in room 215. DeSic Scholarly meetings are a series of scholarly events organized by the Department of Studies in Culture and featuring a wide range of cultural topics. The first meeting will be hosted by dr Urszula Kizelbach who will present a lecture entitled “Shakespearean allusions and uncomfortable truths in Ian McEwan's Nutshell”. Everyone is welcome!

In this ingenious rewriting of Shakespeare’s tragedy, McEwan returns  to the 18th-century tradition of the self-conscious narration,  presenting the unborn Hamlet who addresses his audience straight from  his mother’s womb. In a Tristram Shandy-like fashion, Hamlet presents an  alternative story of his life, enriched by his digressions about modern  society, social media and the Western way of life. In my  pragma-stylistic analysis of the novel, I want to investigate the  homodiegetic narration and the narrator’s ideological viewpoint. I will  use the theory of impoliteness to evaluate Hamlet’s offensive remarks  and his uncooperative attitude towards his mother Trudy and the world  around him. I want to demonstrate how intradiegetic impoliteness is  manifested by Hamlet’s expression of impolite beliefs as a character in  the story. I also want to check if (and how) the implied author might  express his impolite views through the protagonist’s discourse and what  could be the potential face-threatening consequences for the reader  (extradiegetic impoliteness). In my analysis, I wish to demonstrate how  impoliteness can serve as a useful tool for literary characterisation  and how it can be employed to characterise the author-reader  communication in fiction. This lecture introduces my latest research  from my upcoming book “(Im)politeness in McEwan’s Fiction: Literary  Pragma-Stylistics” (Palgrave Macmillan, 2023).

Selected bibliography

Blitvich  Garcés-Conejos, Pilar and Maria Sifianou, “(Im)politeness and  Identity.” In The Palgrave Handbook of Linguistic Impoliteness, edited  by Jonathan Culpeper, Michael Haugh, Dániel Z. Kádár, 227–56. (London:  Palgrave Macmillan, 2017).

Culpeper, Jonathan, Language and Characterisation: People in Plays and Other Texts. (Harlow, UK: Pearson, 2001).

Culpeper,  Jonathan, Impoliteness: Using Language to Cause Offence. (Studies in  Interactional Sociolinguistics 28). (Cambridge: Cambridge University  Press, 2011).

Dobrogoszcz, Tomasz, Family and Relationships in  Ian McEwan’s Fiction: Between Fantasy and Desire. (Lanham, Boulder, New  York and London: Lexington Books, 2018).

Fludernik, Monika, An  Introduction to Narratology. (Translated by Patricia Häusler-Greenfield  and Monika Fludernik). (New York and London: Routledge, 2009).

Kizelbach,  Urszula, “(Im)politeness in Fiction.” In Pragmatics of Fiction, edited  by Miriam A. Locher and Andreas H. Jucker, 425–54. (Berlin and Boston:  De Gruyter Mouton, 2017).