The Novel and the Aesthetic Illusion
The result's identifiers
Result code in IS VaVaI
<a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F68378068%3A_____%2F17%3A00488269" target="_blank" >RIV/68378068:_____/17:00488269 - isvavai.cz</a>
Result on the web
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DOI - Digital Object Identifier
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Alternative languages
Result language
angličtina
Original language name
The Novel and the Aesthetic Illusion
Original language description
The study deals with the issue of aesthetic illusion in relation to the genre of the novel. The argumentation is based on the so-called disjunctive model of fictional communication. It has two levels including 1) the author and the reader, whose communicative transaction frames the imaginary communication between 2) the fictional narrator and his or her fictional audience. The model was introduced to literary studies by Mikhail Mikhailovich Bakhtin. Based on the disjunctive model’s possible characterization as a layered telling of the author and the narrator, illusive reading can be seen as the reader’s temporary relocation to an embedded communicative level. Anti-ilusive novels (e. g. pre-realist novels of the eighteenth century and postmodern metafictions), on the contrary, lead the reader to pay attention not only to the world depicted by fictional narrator, but also to the authorial strategies used in its depiction.
Czech name
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Czech description
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Classification
Type
C - Chapter in a specialist book
CEP classification
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OECD FORD branch
60206 - Specific literatures
Result continuities
Project
<a href="/en/project/GA13-29985S" target="_blank" >GA13-29985S: A Dictionary of Structuralist Literary Theory and Criticism</a><br>
Continuities
P - Projekt vyzkumu a vyvoje financovany z verejnych zdroju (s odkazem do CEP)
Others
Publication year
2017
Confidentiality
S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů
Data specific for result type
Book/collection name
The Aesthetic Illusion in Literature and the Arts
ISBN
978-1-3500-3258-3
Number of pages of the result
10
Pages from-to
225-234
Number of pages of the book
305
Publisher name
Bloomsbury Academic
Place of publication
London
UT code for WoS chapter
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