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7 - Empathy for Sexual Minorities in Skin Lane by Neil Bartlett ()

from Part III - The Author–Reader Channel across Time, Gender, Sex and Race

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2022

Sandrine Sorlin
Affiliation:
Université Paul Valéry, Montpellier
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Summary

Chapter 7 deals with the resurgence of the traditional conversational mode in Neil Bartlett’s twenty-first-century novel, Skin Lane, which, associated with a most unique use of generic ‘you’, favours strategic empathy for a certain Mr F, suffering from repressed desire for a young man. It shows how the technique can be exploited as a pragmatic possibility to reach the reader’s attention anew. Although approached inParts I and II, this chapter more thoroughly investigates the notion of strategic empathy (drawing from specialists on the matter in literary studies and in socio-cognition research), as Bartlett subtly but strongly guides our ethical reaction (in the manner of Fielding) and brings us to align with the second-person pronoun (in the manner of Brontë).

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Chapter
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The Stylistics of ‘You'
Second-Person Pronoun and its Pragmatic Effects
, pp. 154 - 173
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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