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The use of present tense/past tense seems to represent the way we perceive the timeline.
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For example, when referring to events in a story that the reader has read:
- If it is within the story, we use the present tense:
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Harry Potter is learning at Hogwarts.
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- If it is in the past of the story world, we use the past tense:
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Harry Potter lost his parents.
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- It’s strange because even though the reader experienced the story world in the past, we talk about it in the present tense.
- If it is within the story, we use the present tense:
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Another curious case is with folktales:
- Are folktales told in the past tense?
- “The old woman went to the river to do laundry.”
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But when readers refer to it, do they use the present tense?
- So, is it the same?
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Relationship between Reader’s Time and Story World’s Time:
- The timeline of the story world is perceived as a separate axis from real time.
- It is unknown at which point the different timelines align with each reader’s timeline.
- Therefore, it is expressed in the present tense?
- Continued: /villagepump/時制と時間軸
- This is a good way to use the Village Pump.
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I wonder if there are other languages that express the perception of time in a similar way.