6533b871fe1ef96bd12d2069

RESEARCH PRODUCT

La "Narrativización" del discurso y el "efecto omnisciente" en no ficción periodística

Gonzalo Saavedra Vergara

subject

lcsh:Language and LiteratureUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRASLingüísticaFilologías«narrativització»discursnarradorlcsh:Philology. Linguisticslcsh:P1-1091«narrativització»; estilística; discurs; narrador; «efecte omniscient»:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]lcsh:Pestilística«efecte omniscient»

description

This article shows how the narrator can tell more than what the journalistic nonfiction orthodoxy dictates. By way of narrating a source’s speech, the narrator can report states of consciousness –i.e., feelings, thoughts, perceptions– as it happens in novels that have what is commonly known as omniscient narrators. Although this has never been studied thoroughly, it is a frequent practice in successful nonfiction texts.

http://hdl.handle.net/10550/48799