Abstract
This article addresses the question whether unreliable narration, as the concept is understood in the tradition following Wayne Booth’s original definition, can occur in non-fictional stories. Contrary to Pekka Tammi’s conclusion in a recent article, this article’s answer is affirmative. It seeks to demonstrate, through a comparative analysis of respectively Mark’s and Matthew’s stories about the Canaanite woman (Mark 7:24–30 and Matthew 15:21–28), how Matthew comes forward as an unreliable narrator, and that his narrative unreliability is a function of what James Phelan has termed underreporting. The textual analysis, which leans on Gregory Currie’s and James Phelan’s theories of unreliable narration, argues that far from being more or less identical stories, as is suggested by various exegetes, Matthew’s pericope is significantly different from that of Mark. It is different both thematically and regarding the portrayal of the figure of Jesus, but also, and not least, by pursuing a more complex and daring communicative strategy based on unreliable narration and a system of multilayered irony. In concluding the theoretical discussion of unreliable narration, I suggest not only that unreliable narration is possible in non-fictional stories, but also that it is a somewhat misleading concept when applied to the kind of stories Wayne Booth normally referred to, namely fictional first-person narratives.
Highlights
This article addresses the question whether unreliable narration, as the concept is understood in the tradition following Wayne Booth’s original definition, can occur in non-fictional stories
Det er for eksempel blitt argumentert for at upålitelig narrasjon ikke bare forekommer i fiktive førstepersonsfortellinger, men også i tredjepersonsfortellinger og i andre former for kunst, for eksempel film
Remarks on Unreliability in Fiction and Non-Fiction” synes rimelig: ”There is no such thing as an unreliable narrator in non-fiction” (Tammi 2012: 229)
Summary
This article addresses the question whether unreliable narration, as the concept is understood in the tradition following Wayne Booth’s original definition, can occur in non-fictional stories. Denne strategien realiseres gjennom en variant av fenomenet upålitelig narrasjon, til tross for at Matteus-perikopen her er betraktet som en ikke-fiktiv historie, fortalt av en eksternt plassert instans som etter alt å dømme er identisk med forfatteren selv, og som attpåtil ikke gir direkte uttrykk for verdivurderinger i det hele tatt.
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