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Who Is Mrs. McNab? A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to This Narrative Agent and Narrative Device in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
by
Balossi, Giuseppina
in
Blending/Conceptual Integration Theory
/ character
/ characterisation
/ cognitive stylistics
/ Ontology
/ To the Lighthouse
/ Virginia Woolf
/ Women
/ Working class
2025
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Who Is Mrs. McNab? A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to This Narrative Agent and Narrative Device in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
by
Balossi, Giuseppina
in
Blending/Conceptual Integration Theory
/ character
/ characterisation
/ cognitive stylistics
/ Ontology
/ To the Lighthouse
/ Virginia Woolf
/ Women
/ Working class
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Who Is Mrs. McNab? A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to This Narrative Agent and Narrative Device in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
by
Balossi, Giuseppina
in
Blending/Conceptual Integration Theory
/ character
/ characterisation
/ cognitive stylistics
/ Ontology
/ To the Lighthouse
/ Virginia Woolf
/ Women
/ Working class
2025
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Who Is Mrs. McNab? A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to This Narrative Agent and Narrative Device in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
Journal Article
Who Is Mrs. McNab? A Cognitive Stylistic Approach to This Narrative Agent and Narrative Device in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse
2025
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Overview
In this article, I investigate the ontological status of the minor working-class character Mrs. McNab, the cleaner in “Time Passes\", the middle section of Virginia Woolf’s tripartite novel To the Lighthouse. Woolf regarded this section as the connecting block between the two outer blocks, “The Window” and “The Lighthouse”, in which she aimed to depict an empty house, devoid of human presence, and to highlight the passage of time. This section has often been analysed by literary-stylistic criticism as if written from a non-anthropocentric worldview. However, the presence of a lower-class cleaner and the absence of the upper middle-class characters who predominate in the other two blocks has also raised much debate in the literary arena. Literary critics agree that this character is given a narrative voice, but how this voice functions, and whether this character is granted narrative agency in terms of the class issues and social relations in the period of transition between Victorian England and the early twentieth-century, is an issue which still remains open. Drawing upon cognitive stylistics, I suggest reading this character both as a category-based and person-based character, and as a narrative device. First, I carry out the analysis of the repetitive she-clusters and their semantic prosodies; then, through samples of the section “Time Passes\", I analyse how viewpoint blending between narrator/author and character concur to grant narrative agency to Mrs. McNab and to what extent such agency may be limited by our perception of her through the social schemata of a servant, or whether such a perception may undergo a process of schema refreshment. Last, I suggest that this character may also be viewed as a narrative agent by means of which the reader can activate mental processes of TIME and SPACE blending between the three different blocks of the novel. This blending process allows for the completion of the narrative design of the novel: the journey to the lighthouse.
Publisher
MDPI AG
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