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  1. Philosophy, literature, and the death of art.Stephanie Ross - 1989 - Philosophical Papers 18 (1):95-115.
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  • Can a Single Still Picture Tell a Story? Definitions of Narrative and the Alleged Problem of Time with Single Still Pictures.Klaus Speidel - 2013 - Diegesis. Interdisciplinary E-Journal for Narrative Research / Interdisziplinäres E-Journal Für Er-Zählforschung 2 (1):173--194.
    That the same story can be told in different media is one of the fundamental claims of narratology. Claude Bremond famously listed verbal narrative, novels, theater, movies and ballet among potential vehicles for story. He thus prepared the ground for narratology’s future as a discipline engaged in narrative research across media, in principle including single still pictures. However, narratological research concerned with pictorial narrativity generally proceeds from the assumption that although single pictures may evoke or imply stories, they are unsuitable (...)
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  • Exemplarity and Encyclopedism at the Tomb of Eurysaces.Nathaniel B. Jones - 2018 - Classical Antiquity 37 (1):63-107.
    Roman writing of the late Republic and early Empire, especially historiography, is filled with exempla, stories of the past meant to serve as models for contemporary and future behavior. This period also witnessed the rise of an encyclopedic mode of composition among Latin authors, which purported to collect and organize the totality of knowledge in a given field. The following essay proposes that exemplarity and encyclopedism were not just literary devices, but deep organizational principles throughout Roman culture. It seeks to (...)
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