Grotesque in Mahfouz’s The Thief and the Dogs: A Cognitive Stylistic Analysis | ||
CDELT Occasional Papers in the Development of English Education | ||
Article 19, Volume 88, Issue 1, October 2024, Pages 579-616 PDF (925.02 K) | ||
Document Type: Original Article | ||
DOI: 10.21608/opde.2024.410103 | ||
Author | ||
Ghada Abdel Aziz Ashmawi | ||
Associate professor at Faculty of Al Alsun- Ain Shams University- Egypt | ||
Abstract | ||
This study investigates the conceptualization of grotesque in Mahfouz’s The Thief and the Dogs (1961). It aims at reaching a better interpretation of the novel and revealing the author’s ideology. For this aim, Werth’s (1999) Text World Theory as a cognitive linguistic model of language processing and Simpson’s (2014) Narrative Urgency model are used. The novel has four main themes: Alienation, betrayal, anger, and revenge. The results reveal that several sub-worlds are shared in these negative themes specifically Attitudinal, Negation, Deictic, and other sub-worlds. These sub-worlds explain how the text is constructed and how grotesque is conceptualized; hence reaching a better interpretation of such a literary work. The sub-worlds also show that Mahfouz criticizes the socio-economic situation in Egypt after the 1952 revolution through the grotesque characters. Moreover, the Stylistic profile of the Narrative urgency model proves that the text is urgent; hence explaining why we sympathize with the hero although we know that he is a criminal. | ||
Keywords | ||
Cognitive linguistics; Grotesque; Text World Theory; Narrative urgency; Stylistics | ||
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