Abstract

This paper focuses on how peritexts function in communicating a picturebook's narration and what impact they have on reading comprehension or interpretation. Based on modern narratological theory and research findings of metanarration, this study analyses the metanarrative function of peritexts in three picturebooks: Chester by Mélanie Watt, Black and White by David Macaulay, and Keine Angst vor gar Nichts by Gudrun Likar with illustrations by Manuela Olten. The findings of this study reveal that peritexts in picturebooks display metanarration at both a verbal and a visual level; they reflect the act or process of narration, highlight the book's narrative features, and affect the reader's reception of the picturebook.

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