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This volume brings together new research on fiction from the fields of philosophy and linguistics. Following a detailed introduction to the field, the book's 14 chapters examine long-standing issues in fiction research from a perspective that is informed both by philosophy and linguistic theory.
List of contents
- 1: Emar Maier and Andreas Stokke: Introduction
- Part I: Truth, Reference, and Imagination
- 2: François Recanati: Fictional reference as simulation
- 3: Hans Kamp: Sharing real and fictional reference
- 4: Nils Franzén: Fictional truth: In defense of the reality principle
- 5: Sandro Zucchi: On the generation of content
- 6: Manuel García-Carpintero: Do the imaginings that fictions invite have a direction of fit?
- Part II: Storytelling
- 7: Regine Eckardt: In search of the narrator
- 8: Emar Maier and Merel Semeijn: Extracting fictional truth from unreliable sources
- 9: Samuel Cumming: Narrative and point-of-view
- 10: Daniel Altshuler: A puzzle about narrative progression and causal reasoning
- 11: Matthias Bauer and Sigrid Beck: Isomorphic mapping in fictional interpretation
- Part III: Perspective Shift
- 12: Nellie Wieland: Metalinguistic acts in fiction
- 13: Márta Abrusán: Computing perspective shift in narratives
- 14: Isidora Stojanovic: Derogatory terms in free indirect discourse
- 15: Andreas Stokke: Protagonist projection, character-focus, and mixed quotation
About the author
Emar Maier is an assistant professor at the University of Groningen, affiliated with both the Philosophy and Linguistics Departments. After receiving his PhD in Philosophy from the University of Nijmegen in 2006, he led an ERC Starting Grant project (2011-2016) on quotation. He is currently leading an NWO VIDI project, investigating the semantics of imagination and fiction, combining topics and insights from philosophy (e.g. mental files, imaginative resistance) and linguistics (e.g. dynamic semantics). His research interests include fiction and imagination; pictorial semantics and 'superlinguistics'; attitude ascription and quotation; and reference and indexicality
Andreas Stokke is a docent and senior lecturer in Philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, Uppsala University, and a Pro Futura Scientia Fellow at the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study. He has previously held positions at New York University and the University of Oxford. His research is mainly in the fields of philosophy of language and epistemology, but he has also worked on ethics and the philosophy of action. He has published extensively on topics including lying and insincerity, protagonist projection, and dynamic semantics, and he is the author of the OUP volumes Lying and Insincerity (2018) and Lying: Language, Knowledge, Ethics, and Politics (co-edited with Eliot Michaelson; 2018).
Summary
This volume brings together new research on fiction from the fields of philosophy and linguistics. Following a detailed introduction to the field, the book's 14 chapters examine long-standing issues in fiction research from a perspective that is informed both by philosophy and linguistic theory.
Additional text
Some essays may appeal to scholars across discipline; among these are Isidora Stojanovic's "Derogatory Terms in Free Indirect Discourse" (chapter 14), which discusses the "complicity" effect of slurs and mixed-quotation and two-context approaches for understanding this phenomenon in specifically literary texts. But most essays are principally interested in exploring theoretical paradigms of fictional discourse through the idiom and methodologies of linguistics and philosophy of language. This collection will find its readers among advanced scholars in those fields.