• Lietuvių
    • English
  • English 
    • Lietuvių
    • English
  • Login
View Item 
  •   DSpace Home
  • Mokslinės publikacijos (PDB) / Scientific publications (PDB)
  • Knygos / Books
  • Knygų dalys / Book Parts
  • View Item
  •   DSpace Home
  • Mokslinės publikacijos (PDB) / Scientific publications (PDB)
  • Knygos / Books
  • Knygų dalys / Book Parts
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

When both utterances and appearances are deceptive: Deception in multimodal film narrative

Thumbnail
Date
2021
Author
Dynel, Marta Joanna
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
This article gives a comprehensive theoretical account of deception in multimodal film narrative in the light of the pragmatics of film discourse, the cognitive philosophy of film, multimodal analysis, studies of fictional narrative and – last but not least – the philosophy of lying and deception. Critically addressing the extant literature, a range or pertinent notions and issues are examined: multimodality, film narration and the status of the cinematic narrator, the pragmatics of film construction (notably, the characters’ communicative level and the one of the collective sender and the recipient), the fictional world and its truth, the recipient’s film engagement and make believing, as well as narrative unreliability. Previous accounts of deceptive films are revisited and three main types of film deception are proposed with regard to the two levels of communication on which it materialises, the characters’ level and the recipient’s level, as well as the intradiegetic and/or the extradiegetic narrator involved. This discussion is illustrated with multimodally transcribed examples of deception extracted from the American television series House. In the course of the analysis, attention is paid to how specific types of deception detailed in the philosophy of language (notably, lies, deceptive implicature, withholding information, covert ambiguity, and covert irrelevance) are deployed through multimodal means in the three types of film deception (extradiegetic deception, intradiegetic deception, and a combination of both when performed by both cinematic and intradiegetic narrators). Finally, inspired by the discussion of Hitchcock’s controversial lying flashback scene in Stage Fright, as well as films relying on tacit intradiegetic, unreliable narrators (focalising characters) an attempt is made to answer the thorny question of when the extradiegetic (cinematic) narrator can perform lies (through mendacious multimodal assertions) addressed by the collective sender to the recipient, and not just only other forms of deception, as is commonly maintained.
Issue date (year)
2021
URI
https://etalpykla.vilniustech.lt/handle/123456789/152024
Collections
  • Knygų dalys / Book Parts [334]

 

 

Browse

All of DSpaceCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects / KeywordsInstitutionFacultyDepartment / InstituteTypeSourcePublisherType (PDB/ETD)Research fieldStudy directionVILNIUS TECH research priorities and topicsLithuanian intelligent specializationThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects / KeywordsInstitutionFacultyDepartment / InstituteTypeSourcePublisherType (PDB/ETD)Research fieldStudy directionVILNIUS TECH research priorities and topicsLithuanian intelligent specialization

My Account

LoginRegister