

Author: Cimaglia Riccardo
Publisher: John Benjamins Publishing Company
E-ISSN: 1600-0811|48|2|221-253
ISSN: 0035-3906
Source: Revue Romane. Langue et littérature. International Journal of Romance Languages and Literatures, Vol.48, Iss.2, 2013-01, pp. : 221-253
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Abstract
In this paper I will analyze two subordinate clauses which can be frequently found within free indirect reported speech (FIRS, in the paper DIL): relative and causal clauses. After a short illustration of FIRS I will examine the two clauses with an analysis of the passages in FIRS from Italian narrative literature of the XIX century (especially Manzoni and Verga). A relative or a causal clause can recur within a FIRS passage, can open it or can constitute on its own a FIRS passage becoming, respectively, free indirect relative clause (FIRC, in the paper RIL) and free indirect causal clause (FICC, in the paper CIL). FIRC and FICC share two peculiarities: a) They have a rhematic function; b) They are cases of “hypotactizated parataxis” (FIRC and FICC, as subordinate clauses, connect a FIRS passage to the diegesis without the break of the normal FIRS, paratactically juxtaposed to the
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