The Syntax of Unreliable Narrators’ I-Utterances in ‘Gone Girl’ by G. Flynn
Main Article Content
Abstract
Unreliable narration research raises the problem of truthful information presented in fiction, which is for the most part made up. However, the truth in the fictional world is what the reader believes to be true. Therefore, deliberate deluding or confusing the reader by an untrustworthy character creates an additional fictional layer consisting of false facts. This represents the contradiction between the imaginary and the fake, the latter being untrue in terms of fiction. The paper examines how the author of the best-selling novel Gone Girl realizes her intention of deceiving or misleading the readers on the syntactic level of speech of the two main characters who are unreliable narrators. The analysis of sentence structure variety, average sentence length and syntactic stylistic peculiarities of I-utterances aims at ascertaining whether these devices and their frequency indicate that the author gives the readers a hint at the unreliability of the narration. Sentence complexity and types of clauses in composite sentences are also taken into consideration as possible signs of unreliability. As one main character is male and the other is female, the quantitative analysis of syntactic features is carried out separately to detect gender differences.
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
References
Abrams, M.H. A Glossary of Literary Terms.7th ed. Boston, Mass.: Heinle&Heinle, Thomson Learning, Inc., 1999. Print.
Boisclair, William Cody SYCORAX: An Automated Analyzer of the Syntactic Complexity of English Text Diss. The University of Georgia, Athens, GA. 2011. Booth, Wayne. The Rhetoric of Fiction.Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983. Print.
Burgoon, Judee K., J. Pete Blair, Tiantian Qin and Jay F. Nunamaker.“Detecting deception through linguistic analysis.”CCLWeb: Proceedings of International Conference on Intelligence and Security Informatics:Tucson, AZ, USA, 2003: 91–101.Web. 3 June 2017. Conroy, Niall J., Victoria L. Rubin and Yimin Chen “Automatic Deception Detection: Methods for Finding Fake News.” Proceedings of the 78th ASIS&T Annual Meeting: Information Science with Impact: Research in and for the Community,St. Louis, Missouri, November 06-10, 2015. Silver Springs: American Society for Information Science. Vol. 52: 1–4. Print.
Covington, Michael A., Congzhou He, Cati Brown, LorinaNaçi, and John Brown How complex is that Sentence? A proposed revision of the Rosenberg and Abbeduto D-Level Scale.CASPR Research Report 2006-01. Athens, Georgia: Artificial Intelligence Center, the University of Georgia. 2006. Print.
D’hoker, Elke and Gunther Martens, eds. Narrative Unreliability in the Twentieth-Century First-Person Novel. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. 2008. Print.
Feng, Song, Ritwik Banerjee and Yejin Choi “Syntactic Stylometry for Deception Detection.”Proceedings of the 50th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Jeju, Republic of Korea, 8-14 July 2012. (Vol. 2: Short Papers). Jeju Island, Korea: ACL. 171-175. ACL Anthology.Web. 3 June 2017. Fitzpatrick, Eileen, Joan Bachenko and TommasoFornaciariAutomatic Detection of Verbal Deception.San Rafael, California : Morgan and Claypool, 2015. Print.
Flynn, Gillian. Gone Girl. London: Weidenfeld& Nicolson, 2012. Print.
Galasinski, Darriusz. The Language of Deception.A Discourse Analytical Study. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications, Inc. 2000. Print.
Calperin, Ilya R. Stilistikaangliyskogoyazyka.3rd ed.Moscow: Vysshaiashkola, 1981. Print.
Hancock, Jeffrey T., Lauren E.Curry,SaurabhGoorha and Michael Woodworth “On Lying and Being Lied To: A Linguistic Analysis of Deception in Computer-Mediated Communication.” CCLWeb: Discourse Processes 45:1 (2008): 1-23. Web. 13 June 2017. Heyd, Theresa “Unreliability. The Pragmatic Perspective Revisited.” CCLWeb: Journal of Literary Theory 5:1 (2011): 3-17.Web. 19 July 2017. Köppe, Tilman and Tom Kindt “Unreliable Narration With a Narrator and Without.” CCLWeb: Journal of Literary Theory 5:1 (2011): 81–94. Web. 23 July 2017. Murphy, Terence Patrick and Kelly S. Walsh “Unreliable Third Person Narration? The Case of Katherine Mansfield.”Journal of Literary Semantics 46:1 (2017): 67-85. Print.
Newman, M. L., Pennebaker, J. W., Berry, D. S., andRichards, J. M.“Lying words: Predicting deception from linguistic styles.”Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin,29(2003):665–675. Print.
Nünning,Ansgar“Reconceptualizing Unreliable Narration: Synthesizing Cognitive and Rhetorical Approaches.”A Companion to Narrative Theory.Ed. James Phelan and Peter J. Rabinowitz. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2005. 89-105. Print.
Nünning,Vera, ed., UnreliableNarration and Trustworthiness. Intermedial and InterdisciplinaryPerspectives. Berlin, Boston: de Gruyter, coll.«Narratologia», 2015. Print.
Olson, Greta “Reconsidering Unreliability: Fallible and Untrustworthy Narrators.” Narrative 11.1 (2003): 93–109. Print.
Pettersson, Bo. “Kinds of Unreliability in Fiction: Narratorial, Focal, Expositional and Combined.”UnreliableNarration and Trustworthiness. Intermedial and InterdisciplinaryPerspectives. Ed. Vera Nünning.Berlin, Boston: de Gruyter, coll. «Narratologia», 2015. 109-130. Print.
Phelan, James “Estranging Unreliability, Bonding Unreliability, and the Ethics of Lolita.” Narrative Unreliability in the Twentieth-Century First-Person Novel. Eds. ElkeD’hoker and Gunther Martens, eds. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. 2008. 7-28. Phelan, James and Peter J. Rabinowitz, eds. A Companion to Narrative Theory.Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2005. Print.
Qin, Tiantian, Judee K. Burgoon., J. Pete Blair and Jay F. Nunamaker.“Modality Effects in Deception Detection and Applications in Automatic-Deception-Detection.” Proceedings of the 38th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences: Big Island, HI, USA, 2005. 1-10. IEEEXplore Digital Library.Web. 12 June 2017. Schafer, John R. Grammatical differences between truthful and deceptive written narratives. Diss. Fielding Graduate University. 2007. Yacobi, Tamar “Authorial Rhetoric, Narratorial (Un)Reliability, Divergent Readings: Tolstoy’s Kreutzer Sonata.” A Companion to Narrative Theory.Eds. James Phelan and Peter J. Rabinowitz. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2005. 108-123. Zipfel, Frank “Unreliable Narration and Fictional Truth.”CCLWeb:Journal of Literary Theory 5:1 (2011), 109–130.Web. 19 July 2017.