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The Generalized Rhetoric Interpretation Of A Noval Called Rose Finch

Posted on:2020-03-11Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:L Z ZhangFull Text:PDF
GTID:2415330620956862Subject:Linguistics and Applied Linguistics
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Ge Liang’s novel Rose finch is a neoclassical text.It describes people and the city,the brushwork is beautiful and elegant,quite ancient style of the world.The characters and geographical space in the novel blend into Ge Liang’s deep thinking of his hometown of Nanjing.Based on the theory of broad-sense rhetoric,semantic analysis and text reading,the study of Rose finch presents a new look different from that of previous literary interpretations.Based on the theory of "three levels" of broad-sense rhetoric,this paper makes a detailed study of this core rhetoric element:The explanation of this rhetorical element revolves around the three levels of rhetoric in a broad sense.The lexicon meaning and text of Vermilion Bird are the objects of analysis at the discourse level,the female identity symbols and the rhetorical illusion of Nanjing are the interpretations of Vermilion Bird on the text level.The relationship between the mythological archetypes of Vermilion Bird and the construction of the whole text is the philosophical interpretation of Vermilion Bird.The archetypal myth of Vermilion Bird is embodied in Vermilion Bird myth and Nanjing myth.They participate in the discourse construction of Vermilion Bird in their respective ways,showing the characteristics of Vermilion Bird as a mythological text.This thesis proceeds along the research route of semantic-discourse-discourse rhetoric step by step,combining rhetoric with text subject,text construction,mythological archetype and stylistic analysis,and so on,which combines rhetoric with text subject,text construction,myth prototype and stylistic analysis.It provides an observation and reflection from the broad sense of rhetoric for Rose finch-undefineds interpretation of the text.
Keywords/Search Tags:Rose finch, rhetorical identity, rhetorical illusions, mythological archetypes, discourse construction
PDF Full Text Request
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