Dictionary Definition
digress
Verb
1 lose clarity or turn aside especially from the
main subject of attention or course of argument in writing,
thinking, or speaking; "She always digresses when telling a story";
"her mind wanders"; "Don't digress when you give a lecture" [syn:
stray, divagate, wander]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /daɪˈgrɛs/
- Rhymes with: -ɛs
Verb
Translations
to deviate
- Bosnian: zastraniti, odstupiti, skrenuti
- Croatian: zastraniti, odstupiti, skrenuti
- Czech: odbíhat
- Dutch: afdwalen
- Finnish: eksyä (aiheesta), poiketa (aiheesta)
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic:
застранити,
одступити,
скренути
- Roman: zastraniti, odstupiti, skrenuti
- Cyrillic:
застранити,
одступити,
скренути
to transgress
Extensive Definition
Digression (parekbasis in Greek,
egressio, digressio and excursion in Latin) is a section
of a composition or speech that is an intentional change of
subject. In Classical rhetoric since Corax of
Syracuse, especially in Institutio
Oratoria of Quintilian, the
digression was a regular part of any oration or composition. (An
oratorical discourse should have five sections: prelude, narration,
argumentation, digression and conclusion. But, the place of
digression is not fixed, so it can come before or after
argumentation). After setting out the topic of a work and
establishing the need for attention to be given, the speaker or
author would digress to a seemingly disconnected subject before
returning to a development of the composition's theme, a proof of
its validity, and a conclusion. This use of the digression is still
noticeable in many sermons: after the topic, the
speaker will introduce a "story" that seems to be unrelated, return
to the subject, and then reveal that the story illustrates the
speaker's point. A schizothemia is a digression by means of a long
reminiscence..
In literature, the digression (not to be confused
with subplot) was a
substantial part of satiric works of the 18th century. Works such
as Jonathan
Swift's A Tale
of a Tub, Laurence
Sterne's Tristram
Shandy and Diderot's
Jacques le fataliste et son maître made digressiveness itself a
part of the satire. Sterne's novel, in particular, depended upon
the digression, and he wrote, "Digressions, incontestably, are the
sunshine; -- they are the life, the soul of reading; -- take them
out of this book (Tristram Shandy) for instance, -- you might as
well take the book along with them." This use of digression as
satire later showed up in Thomas
Carlysle's work. The digression was also used for non-satiric
purposes in fiction. In Henry
Fielding's
The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling, the author has numerous
asides and digressive statements that are a side-fiction, and this
sort of digression within chapters shows up later in the work of
Charles
Dickens,
William Makepeace Thackeray, Herman
Melville, Victor Hugo
and others. The novels of Tolstoi, J.D.
Salinger, Marcel
Proust, Henry
Miller, Milan
Kundera and Robert Musil
are also full of digressions.
In late twentieth-century literature (in postmodern
fiction), authors began to use digressions as a way of
distancing the reader from the fiction and for creating a greater
sense of play. John Fowles's
The French Lieutenant's Woman and Lawrence
Norfolk's Lemprière's Dictionary both employ digressions to
offer scholarly background to the fiction, while others, like
Gilbert
Sorrentino in Mulligan Stew, use digression to prevent the
functioning of the fiction's illusions.
- Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria, vol IV.
- Maurice Laugaa, 'le théâtre de la digression dans le discours classique' in Semiotica IV, 1971.
- Randa Sabry, Stratégies discursives, Editions de E.H.E.S.S., Paris, 1992. (known as the best historical and theorical study on the digression in literature and rhetoric. Written in French but still unavailable in English)
- Christine Montalbetti & Nathalie Piegay-Gros, la digression dans le récit, Bertrand-Lacoste, Paris, 1994. (summary book for students)
- Pierre Bayard, Hors-sujet : Proust et la digression, Editions de Minuit, Paris, 1996.
Links:
digress in Spanish: Digresión
digress in Galician: Digresión
digress in Japanese: 余談
digress in Norwegian: Digresjon
digress in Polish: Dygresja
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
bear off, bend, branch off, bypass, change the bearing,
curve, depart, depart from, detour, deviate, divagate, divaricate, diverge, drift, excurse, get sidetracked, go
around, go astray, go round about, heel, make a detour, maunder, ramble, roam, sheer, shift, stray, swerve, tack, trend, turn, turn aside, vary, veer, wander