When Fiction Feels Real: Representation and the Reading Mind

Author:   Elaine Auyoung (McKnight Land-Grant Professor and Assistant Professor of English, McKnight Land-Grant Professor and Assistant Professor of English, University of Minnesota)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780190845476


Pages:   176
Publication Date:   10 January 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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When Fiction Feels Real: Representation and the Reading Mind


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Author:   Elaine Auyoung (McKnight Land-Grant Professor and Assistant Professor of English, McKnight Land-Grant Professor and Assistant Professor of English, University of Minnesota)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 15.70cm
Weight:   0.363kg
ISBN:  

9780190845476


ISBN 10:   0190845473
Pages:   176
Publication Date:   10 January 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Novel Approach to Reading Chapter 1: Tolstoy's Embodied Reader: Grasping the Fictional World Chapter 2: Enduring Minds in Austen: Becoming Familiar with Fictional Characters Chapter 3: Organizing Things in Dickens: Comprehension and Narrative Form Chapter 4: George Eliot's Promise of More: How Realism Enchants the Everyday Chapter 5: When Novels End: Hardy and the Liberty of Literary Experience Conclusion: On Mimesis Works Cited

Reviews

Elaine Auyoung describes in loving and persuasive detail the phenomenology of reading realist fiction, attending to how novelists activate sensory, affective, and intellectual responses in readers ... The beauty of this book is its nuanced consideration of alternative possibilities in representational strategies on the part of a handful of canonical novelists. * Suzanne Keen, Hamilton College * When Fiction Feels Real focuses on an almost dangerously fundamental literary question: how does fictional representation actually work? How are novel readers led to see words as worlds? Elaine Auyoung pursues this question at the intersection of author and reader, aesthetic technique and cognitive psychology. By keeping such a steady eye on the how of literary realism - rather than on its causes or its implications - Auyoung has carved out a new and inviting field of scholarly inquiry. * Alex Woloch, Stanford University *


[An] ambitious and highly original book -- Jonathan Taylor , The Times Literary Supplement While a pillar of close reading is that every word matters, Auyoung's work demonstrates the primacy of the situation model that the reader acquires from the text over its precise expression in language. Indeed, throughout her book, she redirects attention to the reader's role and privileges the ways that texts enable ease of comprehension, rather than difficulty and defamiliarization. And by breaking down this comprehension process into its component parts, Auyoung defamiliarizes for us an experience that we otherwise take for granted ... Auyoung shows that we are continually reaching for that fictional world, primed by the text to feel it's real. -- Priyanka Anne Jacob, Modern Philology a deeply researched, thoroughly argued, and provocative approach ... Part of what makes When Fiction Feels Real so resonant and enjoyable is the fact that most if not all of Auyoung's readers have experienced for themselves the phenomena the book seeks to legitimate as worthy of study ... Auyoung makes good on her promise of providing a fresh and productive approach to better comprehending at once our own private attachments to nineteenth-century fiction and our collective critical investments. -- Lauren N. Hoffer, Review of English Studies When Fiction Feels Real is required reading for those interested in cognitive approaches to literature, theories of reading, realism, and the 19th-century novel. -- L. Goodman, CHOICE When Fiction Feels Real focuses on an almost dangerously fundamental literary question: how does fictional representation actually work? How are novel readers led to see words as worlds? Elaine Auyoung pursues this question at the intersection of author and reader, aesthetic technique and cognitive psychology. By keeping such a steady eye on the how of literary realism -- rather than on its causes or its implications -- Auyoung has carved out a new and inviting field of scholarly inquiry. -- Alex Woloch, Stanford University Elaine Auyoung describes in loving and persuasive detail the phenomenology of reading realist fiction, attending to how novelists activate sensory, affective, and intellectual responses in readers ... The beauty of this book is its nuanced consideration of alternative possibilities in representational strategies on the part of a handful of canonical novelists. -- Suzanne Keen, Hamilton College


When Fiction Feels Real focuses on an almost dangerously fundamental literary question: how does fictional representation actually work? How are novel readers led to see words as worlds? Elaine Auyoung pursues this question at the intersection of author and reader, aesthetic technique and cognitive psychology. By keeping such a steady eye on the how of literary realism -- rather than on its causes or its implications -- Auyoung has carved out a new and inviting field of scholarly inquiry. -- Alex Woloch, Stanford University Elaine Auyoung describes in loving and persuasive detail the phenomenology of reading realist fiction, attending to how novelists activate sensory, affective, and intellectual responses in readers ... The beauty of this book is its nuanced consideration of alternative possibilities in representational strategies on the part of a handful of canonical novelists. -- Suzanne Keen, Hamilton College


Author Information

Elaine Auyoung is McKnight Land-Grant Professor at the University of Minnesota, Assistant Professor of English, and Affiliate Faculty of the Center for Cognitive Sciences.

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