Abstract
Narrative has often been considered “an art of time.” This essay traces some of the historical reasons for this state of the field, or fields, of narratology, pinpointing spots in classical, postclassical and contemporary narrative theory where compensation was attempted or is being made through a focus on space instead of time. It suggests that as geography and geographers have become increasingly interested in narrative approaches in dealing with concepts, visualization, and digitalization, it is perhaps (once again) time narratology itself, while continuing to focus on and explore space and place, took account of its history of treating them and looked at how geography has implemented narratological concepts in its technical and philosophical approaches.
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CITATION STYLE
Parker, J. (2018). What we talk about when we talk about space and narrative (and why we’re not done talking about it). Frontiers of Narrative Studies, 4(2), 178–196. https://doi.org/10.1515/fns-2018-0017
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