The initial two chapters of this first volume are devoted to the analysis of time in Augustine and to the concept of plot in Aristotle. The three volumes of this work revolve around them: time in the historical account, time in the fictional account and the experience of time in the narrative. It is something that the reader should not forget if he wishes to understand the ideological development of this great work. Human time is always something narrated, and the narration, in turn, reveals and identifies the temporal existence of man. Time points to narration and narration points to a sense of beyond its own structure. It is the subject of this volume.







