Introduction: Interstitial Fiction

IF 0.6 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE, BRITISH ISLES ENGLISH LITERARY RENAISSANCE Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.1086/721058
W. Hyman, Jennifer Waldron
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Abstract

W hat kind of a “thing,” if anything, is Renaissance fiction? How do artificial creations exist in relation to the real world? How ought we conceptualize the ontological status of a myth, an allegory, a hypothesis, or a thought experiment? And by asking these questions of Renaissance fiction, those fabricated spaces of verse and prose, do we imply that such an answer could possibly be historicized? That is, might Renaissance fiction be—not only formally but also ontologically speaking—a different sort of a thing from the fictions of other eras? Most attempts to approach these questions theorize the fictional by first delineating what fiction is not. For example: it is not real (that’s Plato), it is not of this world (that’s Ernst Cassirer), and it is not a lie (that’s Sir Philip Sidney).Discussing the eighteenth century, Catherine Gallagher proffers that early British novelists “imprisoned and concealed fictionality by locking it inside the confines of the credible,” arguing that fiction’s novelistic form grew out of the “widespread acceptance of verisimilitude as a form of truth, rather than a form of lying.” But for Harry Berger, true fiction’s
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简介:间隙式小说
文艺复兴时期的小说是什么“东西”?人工创造物是如何与现实世界相联系的?我们应该如何概念化神话、寓言、假设或思想实验的本体论地位?通过问文艺复兴时期小说的这些问题,那些虚构的诗歌和散文空间,我们是否意味着这样的答案可能会被历史化?也就是说,文艺复兴时期的小说可能——不仅在形式上,而且在本体论上——与其他时代的小说是一种不同的东西吗?大多数试图解决这些问题的尝试都是通过首先描述什么不是虚构来理论化虚构。例如:它不是真实的(这是柏拉图),它不是这个世界的(那是恩斯特·卡西尔),它也不是谎言(那是菲利普·西德尼爵士)。在讨论十八世纪时,Catherine Gallagher提出,早期的英国小说家“通过将小说锁定在可信的范围内来监禁和隐藏小说”,认为小说的小说形式源于“人们普遍接受逼真是一种真理,而不是一种谎言”
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: English Literary Renaissance is a journal devoted to current criticism and scholarship of Tudor and early Stuart English literature, 1485-1665, including Shakespeare, Spenser, Donne, and Milton. It is unique in featuring the publication of rare texts and newly discovered manuscripts of the period and current annotated bibliographies of work in the field. It is illustrated with contemporary woodcuts and engravings of Renaissance England and Europe.
期刊最新文献
Sidney’s Penetrations: Metaphors and Ideas Margaret Russell, Countess of Cumberland’s Letter to John Layfield: Composing Grief through Consolation and Lamentation A Proof of Pleasure: Renaissance in Rancière, Auerbach, Marlowe Lucy Hutchinson’s Everyday War: The 1640s Manuscript and her Restoration ‘Elegies’ “Noe dish whose tast, or dressing, is unknown / Unto oʳ natives”: Local and Global Material Cultures in the Food Rituals of Thomas Salusbury’s 1634 “Chirk Castle Entertainment”
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