CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BASIC AIMS
1.2 LITERARY STYLISTICS
1.3 APPLYING STYLISTICS TO LITERARY
TRANSLATION
PART ONE
LITERARY STYLISTICS AS A DISCIPLINE
CHAPTER 2 THE CONCERN OF STYLISTICS AS AN
INTERMEDIARY DISCIPLINE
2.1 SOME DIFFERENT CONCEPTIONS OF STYLE
2.2 OBJECTS OF INVESTIGATION OF LITERARY
STYLISTICS
CHAPTER 3 LINGUISTIC FORM AND LITERARY
SIGNIFICANCE
CHAPTER 4 THE LINGUISTIC BASIS: OBJECTIVE OR
SUBJECTIVE?
4.1 LINGUISTIC OBJECTIVITY: A MATTER OF
CONVENTION
4.2 STRUCTURAL FEATURE, PSYCHOLOGICAL
VALUE AND LITERARY SIGNIFICANCE
4.3 DOES INTERPRETATION PRODUCE LINGUISTIC
FACTS?
4.4 A CONSIDERATION OF “WHAT IS STYLISTICS?
PART Ⅱ”
PART TWO
APPLYING STYLISTICS TO THE TRANSLATION OF FICTION
CHAPTER 5 THE PLACE OF LITERARY STYLISTICS
IN THE TRANSLATION OF FICTION
5.1 THE INSUFFICIENCY OF GENERAL
TRANSLATION STUDIES
5.2 CHARACTERISTICS OF FICTIONAL
(VS. POETIC) TRANSLATION
5.3 LITERARY STYLISTICS AND DECEPTIVE
EQUIVALENCE
CHAPTER 6 ASPECTS OF LEXICAL EXPRESSION
6.1 DEVIATION IN THE FORM OF “ILLOGICALITY”
6.2 OBJECTIVITY
6.3 UNRELIABILITY AND CHARACTERIZATION
6.4 “REDUNDANT” ENCODING
CHAPTER 7 ASPECTS OF SYNTAX
7.1 SYNTAX AND PACE
7.2 SYNTAX AND PROMINENCE
7.3 SYNTAX AND THE IMITATION OF PROCESS
7.4 THE TRANSFERENCE OF PARALLELISM
7.5 JUXTAPOSITION AND PSEUDOSIMULTANEITY7.6 LINGUISTIC FORM AND FICTIONAL REALITY
CHAPTER 8 SPEECH AND THOUGHT PRESENTATION
8.1 BASIC MODES IN ENGLISH
8.2 BASIC MODES IN CHINESE
8.3 THE TRANSFERENCE OF BLEND
8.4 THE TRANSFERENCE OF DIRECT SPEECH
8.5 THE FUNCTIONS OF FIS AND THE NEED
FOR ITS PRESERVATION
8.6 THE TRANSFERENCE OF SLIPPING
8.7 CONCLUSION
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
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