ABSTRACT

'Time travels in divers paces with divers people.' Shakespeare’s oft-quoted line contains a hidden ambiguity: not only do individual people experience time differently, but time travels in diverse paces when we are with diverse persons. The line articulates a contemporary understanding of subjective time: it is changed by interaction with our social environment. Interacting with other people—and even literary characters—can slow or quicken the experience of time. Interactive time, and the paradigm of enactive cognition in which it sits, calls for an expansion of traditional ideas of time in narrative. The first book-length study of interactive time in narrative, Catching Time explains how lived time and narrative time interpenetrate each other, so that the relational model of subjective time acts as a narrative function. Catching Time develops a novel, interdisciplinary framework, drawing on cognitive science, narratology, and linguistics, to understand the patterns of temporality that shape narrative.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction to Catching Time

chapter 2|46 pages

Lived and Literary Narratives

From Embodiment to Emplotment

chapter 3|20 pages

‘Body Time'

Don DeLillo's The Body Artist

chapter 4|24 pages

The Flow of Time

Lía Chara's Agua

chapter 5|31 pages

‘Home wasn't built in a day'

The Temporality of Place in Lisa Gorton's The Life of Houses

chapter 6|26 pages

Bodies and Technologies

Martín Felipe Castagnet's Los cuerpos del verano

chapter 7|6 pages

Postface