Fictional WorldsHarvard University Press, 1986 - 178 pagine Creators of fiction demand that we venture into alien spaces, into the worlds of Antigone, Don Quixote, Faust, Sherlock Holmes. Created worlds may resemble the actual world, but they can just as easily be deemed incomplete, precarious, or irrelevant. Why, then, does fiction continue to pull us in and, more interesting perhaps, how? In this beautiful book Pavel provides a poetics of the imaginary worlds of fiction, their properties and their reason for being. Thomas Pavelis a noted literary theorist and a novelist as well. His genial, graceful book has a polemical edge: he notes that structuralism started as a project to infuse new life into literary studies through the devices of linguistics. That project undercut referential issues, however, and is now obsolete. Pavelargues that what matters about fiction is its relation to the human capacity of invention and the complex requirements of imagination. He moves decisively beyond the constraints of formalism and textualism toward a diverse theory of fiction that is sensitive to both literary and philosophical concerns. Along the way he takes its through special landscapes that reveal the inextricability of art, religion, and myth. This is a venturesome book of the first order. |
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... reveal the underrating of kinship links . In a less apparent way , Oedipus ' victory over the Sphinx , who is a chthon- ian monster , and the meaning of Oedipus ' name ( " swollen foot " ) are assumed to signal respectively the negation ...
... revealed a tragic destiny ? " The transferring of an event across the border of legend can be labeled mythification . The distant kinship between mythification and what the Russian formalists called defamiliarization is worth noticing ...
... reveals to us the essential saliency of the world in question , a world open to hierophany , pro- digies , and saviors . Thus , whether fictional worlds represent credible accounts of our universes or give a version of universes ...
Sommario
Beyond Structuralism | 1 |
Size Incompleteness | 73 |
of the Imaginary | 136 |
Copyright | |
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