Dominance between the implicit author and the character In two novels by Falah Rahim
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36318/jall/2022/v1.i36.11769Keywords:
dominance, author, Character, a novel, analyzing, Speech, monetary, Salad, IdeologyAbstract
This paper examines the manifestations of narrative hegemony in two novels by the Iraqi writer Falah Rahim, namely: (Hedgehogs on a Hot Day) and (The Sound of Drums from afar), through the implicit author and his relationship to ideology, the fictional character and its relationship to identity.
The term hegemony is one of the central terms in studies of critical discourse analysis, especially in the theoretical approach enacted by the English academic Norman Faircliffe, which is the adopted approach in this research. Therefore, it was worth starting with a brief definition of this theoretical trend, followed by the discussion of the implicit author, and then discussing his relationship with hegemony and ideology in the novel (The Hedgehogs on a Hot Day), and then moving on to discuss the relationship of personality with dominance and identity in the novel (The Sound of the Drums from Far). The analysis in this research is based on interpretation and interpretation, and linking the text with the social context .
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Copyright (c) 2023 عقيل عبد الحسين، علي كاظم داود
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