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Normative Fiction‐Making and the World of the Fiction
31
Citations
40
References
2019
Year
Literary TheoryFirst-person NarrativeNarrative And IdentityRhetoricInfluential AccountNarrative RepresentationLiterary CriticismLanguage StudiesLiterary StudyImaginative WritingCritical TheoryFictional WorkCreative NonfictionLiterary HistoryContemporary FictionPlaywritingArtsKendall WaltonNormative Fiction‐making
In recent work, Kendall Walton has abandoned his very influential account of the fictionality of p in a fictional work in terms of prescriptions to imagine emanating from it. He offers examples allegedly showing that a prescription to imagine p in a given work of fiction is not sufficient for the fictionality of p in that work. In this article, both in support and further elaboration of a constitutive‐norms speech‐act variation on Walton's account that I have defended previously, I critically discuss his objections. In addition to answering his concerns and developing the account further, I provide additional abductive support for its explanatory virtues vis‐à‐vis institutional accounts like Walton's and Gricean speech‐act proposals.
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