Chapter 2
Marked forms and indeterminate implicatures in Ernest Hemingway’s
Fiesta: The Sun Also Rises
Article outline
- 2.1Introduction
- 2.2The extract
- 2.3The novel and its critics
- 2.4Markedness and speech presentation
- 2.4.1Marked forms
- 2.4.2Speech presentation in Fiesta
- 2.4.2.1Syntax/idiom
- 2.4.2.2“Colouring”
- 2.4.2.3Explicit statement
- 2.5Markedness and indeterminacy in pragmatics
- 2.6Summary
-
Notes
-
References
References (37)
References
Adair, William (2012). Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises:
the novel as gossip. The Hemingway Review 31(2), 114–118. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Bakker, Jan (1972). Ernest Hemingway: The artist as man of action. Assen: Van Gorcum.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Breheny, Richard (1998). Inference economy and focus. In Villy Rouchota and Andreas Jucker (Eds.), Current issues in relevance theory (pp. 105–140). Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Capone, Alessandro (2009). Are explicatures cancellable? Towards a theory of speaker
intentionality. Intercultural Pragmatics 6, 55–83. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Carter, Ronald and Stockwell, Peter (2008). Stylistics: retrospect and prospect. In Ronald Carter and Peter Stockwell (Eds.), The language and literature reader (pp. 291–302). London: Routledge.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Clark, Herbert H. and Gerrig, Richard J. (1990). Quotations as demonstrations. Language 66, 764–805. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Wayne, Davis (1998). Implicature: Intention, Convention and Principle in the Failure of Gricean Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
De Brabanter, Philippe (2017). Why quotation is not a semantic phenomenon, and why it
calls for a pragmatic theory. In Ilse Depraetere and Raphael Salkie (Eds.) Semantics and pragmatics: Drawing a line (pp. 227–254). Berne: Springer. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Emmott, Catherine and Alexander, Marc (2014). Foregrounding, burying and plot
construction. In Peter Stockwell and Sarah Whiteley (Eds.), The Cambridge handbook of stylistics (pp. 329–343). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Gibbs, Raymond and Colston, Herbert (2012). Interpreting Figurative Meaning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Gottlieb Vopat, Carole (1973). The end of The Sun Also Rises: A new
beginning. In Matthew J. Bruccoli and C E Frazer Jr Clark (Eds.) Fitzgerald/Hemingway Annual, 1972 (pp. 91–115). Dayton, Ohio: National Cash Register Company.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Grice, Paul (1975). Logic and conversation. In Paul Grice (1989). Studies in the way of words (pp. 22–40). Harvard: Harvard University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Gurko, Leo (1968). Ernest Hemingway and the pursuit of heroism. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Halliday, M. A. K. (1971). Linguistic function and literary style: an inquiry into
William Golding’s The Inheritors
. In S. Chatman (ed.). Literary style: a symposium (pp. 330–365). Oxford: Oxford University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Haspelmath, Martin (2006). Against markedness (and what to replace it
with). Journal of Linguistics 42, 25–70. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Haugh, Michael (2015). Im/politeness implicatures. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Hemingway, Ernest (1926). Fiesta: The sun also rises. London: Vintage [2000].![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Horn, Laurence (2007). Neo-Gricean pragmatics: A Manichaean
manifesto. In Noel Burton-Roberts (Ed.) Pragmatics (pp. 153–183). Basingstoke: Palgrave. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Katzir, Roni (2014). On the roles of markedness and contradiction in the use
of alternatives. In Salvatore Pistoia Reda (Ed.). Pragmatics, semantics and the case of scalar
implicature (pp. 40–71). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Leech, Geoffrey and Short, Mick (2007). Style in fiction (2nd edition). London: Longman.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Levinson, Stephen (2000). Presumptive meanings, the theory of generalized conversational
implicature. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Miall, David and Kuiken, Don (1994). Foregrounding, defamiliarization, and affect: response to
literary stories. Poetics 22, 389–407. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Mukařovský, Jan (1932). Jazyk spisovný a jazyk básnický. In B. Havránek and M. Weingart (eds). Spisovná čeština a jazyková kultura. (pp. 123–156). Praha: Melantrich. Translated by Paul Garvin and published (abridged) in Luke Burke, Tony Crowley and Alan Girvin (eds) (2000). The Routledge language and cultural theory reader. (pp. 225–231). London: Routledge.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Rett, Jessica (2015). The semantics of evaluativity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Rother, James (1986). Close-reading Hemingway: risking mispronounced stresses
in The Sun Also Rises
. The Hemingway Review 6(1), 79–87.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Saul, Jennifer (2010). Speaker meaning, conversational implicature and
calculability. In Klaus Petrus (Ed.) Meaning and analysis (pp. 170–183). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Savola, David (2006). “A very sinister book”: The Sun Also
Rises as critique of pastoralism. The Hemingway Review 26(1), 25–46. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Schmigalle, Gunther (2005). “How people go to Hell”: pessimism, tragedy and affinity
to Schopenhauer in The Sun Also
Rises
. The Hemingway Review 25(1), 7–21. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Sperber, Dan and Wilson, Deirdre (1995). Relevance, communication and cognition (2nd edition). Oxford: Blackwell.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Spilka, Mark (1961). The death of love in The Sun Also
Rises
. In Carlos Baker (Ed.) Hemingway and his critics, an international anthology (pp. 80–92). New York: Hill and Wang.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Sternberg, Meir (1981). Polylingualism as reality and translation as
mimesis. Poetics Today 2, 221–239. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Sullivan, Hannah (2013). The work of revision. Harvard: Harvard University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Taylor-Batty, Juliette (2013). Multilingualism in modernist fiction. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Tomkins, David (2008). The “Lost Generation” and the generation of loss: Ernest
Hemingway’s materiality of absence and The Sun Also
Rises
. Modern Fiction Studies 54(4), 744–765. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Watkins Fulton, Lorie (2004). Reading around Jake’s narration: Brett Ashley and
The Sun Also Rises
. The Hemingway Review 24, 61–80. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Weston, Daniel and Gardner-Chloros, Penelope (2015). Mind the gap: what code-switching in literature can teach
us about code-switching. Language and Literature 24, 194–212. ![DOI logo](https://benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Young, Philip (1966). Ernest Hemingway a reconsideration. Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.![Google Scholar](https://benjamins.com/logos/google-scholar.svg)
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Chapman, Siobhan
2020.
Implicature. In
The Pragmatics of Revision,
► pp. 31 ff.
![DOI logo](//benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
Statham, Simon
2020.
The year’s work in stylistics 2019.
Language and Literature: International Journal of Stylistics 29:4
► pp. 454 ff.
![DOI logo](//benjamins.com/logos/doi-logo.svg)
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 28 june 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.