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foregrounded

Foregrounded is the past participle of foreground, used to describe elements in text or discourse that have been made prominent relative to surrounding material. Foregrounding can arise through linguistic form, syntactic structure, or rhetorical technique and is often intentional.

In literary studies and stylistics, foregrounding refers to devices that render language itself noticeable. Poetic form,

In linguistics and discourse analysis, foregrounding describes the processes by which certain features are promoted to

Functions include aesthetic effect, cognitive engagement, thematic signaling, and stylistic stance. Foregrounded passages often establish mood,

Historically, foregrounding is associated with stylistics traditions from the Prague School and other approaches that study

See also: backgrounding, defamiliarization, stylistics, poetics, Functional Sentence Perspective.

unusual
syntax,
striking
diction,
phonological
patterns
such
as
alliteration
or
rhyme,
and
inventive
metaphors
can
foreground
the
text’s
language,
guiding
interpretation
by
drawing
attention
to
how
meaning
is
produced
rather
than
only
what
is
said.
prominence
within
a
text.
It
may
result
from
deviation
from
expected
norms,
parallelism,
repetition,
or
distinctive
word
order,
and
it
interacts
with
readers’
perception
and
memory.
emphasize
key
motifs,
or
create
a
sense
of
distance
from
straightforward
narration.
how
form
and
content
interact.
It
is
linked
to
related
concepts
such
as
backgrounding,
defamiliarization
(ostranenie),
and
the
broader
study
of
the
function
of
language
in
literature
and
discourse.