Abstract

The paper examines narrative operations involved in the temporal configuration of experience within a general framework of the phenomenological treatment of temporality. Taking as its point of departure a most basic instantiation of temporal experience, namely that of a ticking clock, it argues that the narrative dynamics which give form and charge the interval between tick and tock with significant duration are directly derived from the time-constituting operations of the embodied mind and, as such, are independent of their linguistic articulations. Thus, it critically invokes Husserl’s account of time-consciousness, more specifically his model of retention-primary impression-protention, first in the context of Francisco J. Varela’s account of the neurodynamics of lived time, and then with reference to David Carr’s argument for continuity between narrative and the world of our experiences and actions. Building on these critical trajectories, the paper outlines how proto-narrative elements of lived time form a basis for the properly narrative operation of emplotment and, in its final section, discusses some of the complex relations between lived time and narrative time by contrasting Carr’s account of narrative with Paul Ricoeur’s model of triple mimesis.

Highlights

  • This paper seeks to discuss the narrative dynamics involved in the temporal configuration of experience by delineating a critical trajectory that links proto-narrative elements of lived time with the poetics of emplotment

  • How are our narrative faculties engaged in handling this crude form of lived temporality? What kind of structure do they supply when processing what appears to be a simple succession of sounds? Can we take these narrative dynamics as a basis for the more complex and nuanced articulations of time that we encounter in historiography or cultural and literary narratives? If so, how does this contribute to the properly narrative operation of emplotment? These are the main questions that animate my inquiry

  • Ricoeur’s model stresses the correlation between the narrative mode and temporal character of human experience conceived as a Btrans-cultural form of necessity^ (Ricoeur 1984, p. 52) by underlying the importance of cultural competence, linguistic capacities as well as the deployment of narrative techniques and strategies of representation

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Summary

Introduction

This paper seeks to discuss the narrative dynamics involved in the temporal configuration of experience by delineating a critical trajectory that links proto-narrative elements of lived time with the poetics of emplotment. In order to study the connection between lived time and narrative time, the discussion will begin by examining. As a point of departure, the ticking clock will be taken as a most basic and paradigmatic instantiation of temporal experience.. How are our narrative faculties engaged in handling this crude form of lived temporality? I will attempt to answer them in the nine sections of this paper, which taken together provide a rough outline of the narrative faculties which assist us in understanding and engaging with the multiple temporalities and timescapes of our lives

Beyond linguistic isomorphism
Neurodynamics of lived time
A phenomenology of time-consciousness
Temporality of action
Temporal configuration and narrative structure
From practical to second-order narratives
Concluding remarks
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