A Dialogue Concerning Oratorical Partitions(c. 50 BC)
De Optimo Genere Oratorum(46 BC)
Orator(46 BC)
On the Sublime(c. 50)
Institutio Oratoria(95)
Panegyrici Latini(100–400)
Dialogus de oratoribus(102)
De doctrina Christiana(426)
De vulgari eloquentia(1305)
Copia: Foundations of the Abundant Style(1521)
Language as Symbolic Action(1966)
A General Rhetoric(1970)
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Narrative criticism focuses on the stories a speaker or a writer tells to understand how they[clarification needed] help us make meaning out of our daily human experiences. Narrative theory is a means by which we can comprehend how we impose order on our experiences and actions by giving them a narrative form. According to Walter Fisher, narratives are fundamental to communication and provide structure for human experience and influence people to share common explanations and understandings.[1] Fisher defines narratives as "symbolic actions-words and/or deeds that have sequence and meaning for those who live, create, or interpret them." Study of narrative criticism, therefore, includes form (fiction or non-fiction, prose or poetry), genre (myth, history, legend, etc.), structure (including plot, theme, irony, foreshadowing, etc.) characterization, and communicator's perspective.
^Fisher, Walter (1987), Human Communication as Narration: Toward a Philosophy of Reason, Value, and Action, Columbia: U of South Carolina P, p. 58
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