A Linguistic Game: A Brief Language Analysis of Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book

Xuan GUO

Abstract


The book Tripmaster Monkey: His Fake Book (TM) is published as a novel, which is Kingston’s first true novel during her writing career. There are many remarkable writing techniques in her trilogy, such as, language usage, narrative perspectives, plot narration and other diverse narrative styles. In this thesis, it aims to focus on one of the most attractive features-its language usage in TM, especially on the names of its title and protagonist which strikingly embodies the significance of readers’ participation and the uncertainty of the language in a postmodern fiction.


Keywords


A linguistic game; Name; Uncertainty; Identity; Postmodernism

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References


Hornby, A. S. (2002). Oxford advanced learner’s English-Chinese dictionary (4th ed.) (B. D. Li, Trans.). Beijing: the Commercial Press, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Kingston, M. H. (1983). Tripmaster monkey: His fake book. New York: Vintage Books, A Division of Random House, Inc.

Leech, G. N., & Short, M. H. (2001). Style in fiction: A linguistic introduction to English fictional prose. Beijng, China: Foreign Language Teaching and Research Press.

Skenazy, P. (1998). Conversations with Maxine Hong Kingston (p.81). In T. Martin (Ed.). Mississippi: University Press of Mississippi.

Wang, S. Y., Guo, H., & Miao, X. W. (2004). The progress of stylistics study in China. Shanghai: Shanghai Foreign Language Education Press.

Wang, B. (2008). A quest for cultural identity: A postcolonial study of Tripmaster Monkey: His fake book. Qufu: Qufu Normal University, 37.

Whitman, W. (n.d.). Leaves of grass, song of myself. Retrieved from http://www.fullbooks.com/Leaves-of-Grass.html

Xu, Y. Z. (2005). English stylistics. Beijng: Higher Education Press.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/8895

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