Publicado 01-06-2006
Palabras clave
- spoken code,
- written code,
- phonetic code,
- Louis-Ferdinand Céline,
- spoken language
Cómo citar
Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución 4.0.
Resumen
The study analyses innovative stylistic means of French novelist Louis-Ferdinand Céline - one of the first writers who has introduced the need to place spoken language into written text. The author treats theoretical paradox of spoken French in its written form, analysing the double linguistic distinction between the phonetic code and the graphic code and between the spoken code and the written code. Célin's style, which modifies the rules of standard French, is characterised by the argotic and vulgarised narration, which decomposes traditional syntax. The use of new means of expression is effectuated at several levels - at the vocabulary level (argot, neologisms, derivation), at the syntagma level (repetition, anticipation, segmentation), and at the sentence level (the use of juxtaposition and coordination on detriment to the subordination). The verb forms typical of colloquial style or, on the contrary, forms which are used in traditional narration are also introduced. The paper deals with Célin's first novel Voyage au bout de la nuit, where the narration is still traditional, the narrator is fictitious, his name is different from the author's, the narration is linear, the novel is divided into chapters and the story has a beginning and an end. The search for the new means of expression is therefore reflected exclusively at the level of language and style.