"Framed Narratives "was first published in 1985. Minnesota
Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable
books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the
original University of Minnesota Press editions.
The work of French "philosophe " Denis Diderot (1713-1784) has
inspired conflicting reactions in those who encounter him. Diderot
has been admired and despised; he has moved his readers and
irritated them - often at the same time. His work continually
shifts between mutually exclusive positions - neither of which
provides an entirely satisfactory answer to the question at hand,
yet neither of which can be disregarded. The nature of these
paradoxes has been the fundamental problem in Diderot, a problem
that his interpreters have approached by imagining synthetic
perspectives or frames within which the paradoxes could be
resolved.
In "Framed Narratives," Jay Caplan focuses on the problem of
framing "in "and "of "Diderot. He proposes an interpretive model
that draws upon the notion of dialogue developed by Mikhail
Bakhtin. For Bakhtin, no utterance can be reduced to a univocal
meaning; one's discourse is always marked by other voices. In
Diderot, Caplan shows, the narrative device of the tableau engages
the reader (or beholder) in a dialogic relationship with the author
and the characters. Diderot defines the players of those roles as
members of a family, one of whom is always missing, and that
sacrificial relationship becomes an integral part of the text.
Caplan then uses the concept of the tableau to interpret the
rhetoric of gender, genre, and pathos in Diderot's works for and
about the theater, his novel "The Nun," the philosophical dialogue
"D'Alembert's Dream," and his correspondence.
What emerges from these readings is not only an interpretation
of certain texts, but a description of Diderot's--and, by
implication, early bourgeois--poetics. "Framed Narratives " is, in
addition, one of the first attempts to rely upon Bakhtin's concepts
in the interpretation of specific texts, in this case the work of
an essentially dialogic writer. A socio-historical supplement to
"Framed Narratives "is provided in Jochen Schulte-Sasse's
afterword.
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