Publication

Ironie pas morte : Nicolas Mathieu contre le politiquement correct

Bibliographic Details
Summary:Irony is a: 1/non-literal 2/ contradictory 3/ and offensive statement; it implies a contradiction which opposes 1/ what is said et what is meant (antiphrasis); 2/ what is said and what is referred to (irony is crucially context-sensitive); what is said by the speaker and what is generally agreed (the domain of common belief or probable knowledge, doxa in Greek, is more often than not the aim of irony). Irony opacifies communication. It creates a gap between those who love and understand it and the others: therefore it is not inclusive. It challenges the scruples of political correctness. Nicolas Mathieu’s realistic novels mock the European subalterns; what is the point of this unconventional literary strategy?
Subject:irony political correctness Mathieu (Nicolas) politiquement correct style  littérature française contemporaine style contemporary French literature  ironie
Country:Portugal
Document type:journal article
Access type:Open
Associated institution:Carnets, Revista Electrónica de Estudos Franceses
Language:French
Origin:Carnets, Revista Electrónica de Estudos Franceses
Description
Summary:Irony is a: 1/non-literal 2/ contradictory 3/ and offensive statement; it implies a contradiction which opposes 1/ what is said et what is meant (antiphrasis); 2/ what is said and what is referred to (irony is crucially context-sensitive); what is said by the speaker and what is generally agreed (the domain of common belief or probable knowledge, doxa in Greek, is more often than not the aim of irony). Irony opacifies communication. It creates a gap between those who love and understand it and the others: therefore it is not inclusive. It challenges the scruples of political correctness. Nicolas Mathieu’s realistic novels mock the European subalterns; what is the point of this unconventional literary strategy?