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EN
The paper focuses on one of the devices serving to mark the foregrounded part of a lyric poem, which is the break of referential continuity. It is shown that in many instances the most salient part of the poem, corresponding to the discovery of some important truth or some other change in the author’s attitude towards the world, is constructed in such a way that its referential links to the preceding text are either interrupted or seriously weakened. The important implications which this fact has for the general theory of grounding are discussed at some length.
EN
As is well known (Chafe 1994), two types of human consciousness can be distinguished, one of which is extraverted consciousness presupposing that each event is thought of as included into relevant context, related to other 'neighboring' events, and another one is introverted consciousness, i.e. that representing events in a decontextualized, island-like manner. In the article it is shown that this distinction has immediate bearing upon composition of lyrical discourse, since its foregrounded fragments display a clear tendency towards introverted language.
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