Hopscotch: an emergent literary structural motif, 2005
Murrell, Carlos D.
2000-2009
This study explores the value of hopscotch as an emergent literary structural motif as compared in the Argentine novel Rayuela (1963) by Julio Cortazar and the African-American novel 2nd Time Around (1996) by James Earl Hardy. The study was based upon two observations: the rhythm of language and the perception of consciousness as inherent linguistic factors in the game of hopscotch. An interpretative discourse analysis approach was used to forge a hyperreal space in which other cross-water speakerly text(s) could be discussed. A variety of electronic database and internet queries along with one-on-one conversations heralded the uniqueness of the researchers theory: hopscotch as literary text. The researcher found that the current level of knowledge about this theory is low among scholars and the general population. The contemporary literary forms of hopscotch can be used to promote cultural awareness and to heal the psychological effects of the game of divide and conquer on the human mind. The researcher concluded that the old game is best interpreted in terms of the modalities of textclass, gender, sexuality and race-to symbolize the captors hierarchical voice. However, to invert those signified a threat to national identities, wherefore the captives voice sufficed to behave as codified language.
text
application/pdf
2005-12-01
dissertation
Doctor of Arts (DA)
Clark Atlanta University
Department of Foreign Languages
Monye, Laurent P. Figueroa, Orlando
Georgia--Atlanta
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/cau.td:2005_murrell_carlos_d