Book
French
ID: <
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/215030>
Abstract
The presence of irony in Marc’s 14,53-72 ‘sandwich’ story is an aspect of the marcian narrative that is now well established. However, the cases of irony identified in this auction may vary greatly from one specialist to another. What is surprising, in reality, is the extent to which this phenomenon tends to escape any definition that is both simple and operative. As part of a narrative approach to the second evangile, one option is to opt for an understanding of irony as a narrative by adopting the definition of dramatic irony as a working hypothesis. On the basis of this category of irony, it will be necessary to observe how this process is implemented in the narrative, paying attention to the programming of the reader’s knowledge and to the effect (or effects) it allows for the reader’s home.