Foreshadowing
Narrative Gravity in the Autumnal Chronotope of Short Stories by Aumonier and Jacobs
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.32674/vrsz4331Keywords:
Atmosphere, chronotope, foreshadowing, harvest-before-death, mood, narrative gravityAbstract
This study re-examines how setting operates as an active narrative force by analyzing Stacy Aumonier’s “The Perfect Murder” and W. W. Jacobs’s “The Interruption.” While existing narratological frameworks have theorized Bakhtin’s chronotope and anticipation as separate components, they have not sufficiently explained how environmental conditions produce anticipatory pressure within the storyworld. Using qualitative close reading and an interdisciplinary synthesis of Bakhtin’s chronotope, phenomenological accounts of mood and atmosphere, and temporal theories from Genette and Brooks, the study argues that the lateautumn environments in both stories function as fused narrative chronotopic fields rather than descriptive backdrops. The analysis identifies a shared “harvest-before-death” chronotope in which November atmospheres externalize psychological instability and render outcomes feel inevitable by constraining character agency. Building on these findings, the article advances narrative gravity as a theoretical model that pulls the storyworld towards its endings long before events unfold.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Interdisciplinary Journal of Innovation in Nepalese Academia

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Upon publication articles are immediately and freely available to anyone, anywhere, at any time. All published articles are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 Unported License. All articles are permanently available online. The final version of articles may be posted to an institutional repository or to the author's own website as long as the article includes a link back to the original article posted on OJED.





