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Joined: May 2006
Posts: 1
stranger
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OP
stranger
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 1 |
Does anyone have any idea if there is a term to describe the technique that many Gothic authors use, especially Mary Shelley with the character of Victor Frankenstein, where the speaker claims that "there are no words to express the pain I felt that night", or "nobody can understand the agony I went through". Something along the lines of paralipsis or apophasis or ennoia (?) but I wasn't sure that these quite fit.
A lecturer once made it our weekly assignment to discover this term but I didn't return for the answer and have regretted it ever since!
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Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 13,803
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Dec 2000
Posts: 13,803 |
You could go hunting in the Sylva Rhetoricae.
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Joined: May 2005
Posts: 456
addict
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addict
Joined: May 2005
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No amount of pondering can capture the real answer but will throw in 'unspeakable hyperbole' just for effect.
ÅΓª╥┐↕§
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Joined: Aug 2005
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 3,290 |
Not quite rhetorical, but how about ineffable and nescient agony?
Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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Joined: Sep 2000
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Sep 2000
Posts: 4,757 |
> Waiving as inadmissible, crude, and certainly unpublishable the possibility that Mary Shelley simply didn't have very many words at her disposal and was thus stymied...
heh, a nice example of paralipsis squared!
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Joined: May 2005
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addict
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addict
Joined: May 2005
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Quote:
You could go hunting in the Sylva Rhetoricae.
Did not look at it last time here; that site is outstanding! Thanks for posting it.
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