[ont.events] SUNY Buffalo Cognitive Science: Ann Banfield

rapaport@sunybcs (William J. Rapaport) (03/12/88)

                STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO

                  GRADUATE GROUP IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE

                                PRESENTS

                              ANN BANFIELD

                         Department of English
                  University of California at Berkeley

              THE LINGUISTICS OF SUBJECTIVITY IN NARRATIVE

Dr. Banfield will talk about her most recent work concerning the  issues
of non-narrated text, "point of view", and the philosophy of language as
it relates to subjectivity in narrative.

Using such disparate sources as Chomskyan linguistics, Russell's  theory
of  egocentric particulars, and Auerbach's notion of mimesis, and bring-
ing them to bear on the writings of Virginia  Woolf,  Gustave  Flaubert,
and other English and French novelists, Dr. Banfield produces strong and
interesting assertions about the nature of narrative.  Two of  her  most
controversial assertions are that the communication model of language is
inappropriate to a theory of subjectivity in narrative and that not  all
narratives  have  narrators.   Building  on  the tradition of generative
grammar rather than on structuralist principles of linguistics, Banfield
brings  a fresh perspective to current debates on the status of linguis-
tics for narrative theory.

Dr. Banfield's argument for a falsifiable  narrative  theory,  presented
most  fully  in her 1982 book _Unspeakable Sentences_ (Routledge & Kegan
Paul), has provoked considerable interest and controversy in the  fields
of literary linguistics, narrative theory, and the poetics of style.  In
addition, her theories have the potential to stimulate new discussion in
such  related  fields as linguistic pragmatics, artificial intelligence,
and the philosophy of the subject.

                        Thursday, March 24, 1988
                               4:00 P.M.
                        280 Park, Amherst Campus

There will be an evening discussion with Dr. Banfield  at  the  home  of
Erwin  Segal,  101  Carriage  Circle, Amherst.  For further information,
call Bill Rapaport (Dept. of Computer Science, 636-3193 or 3180) or Gail
Bruder (Dept of Psychology, 636-3676).