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Fusing speculative realism, analytical and linguistic philosophy
this book theorises the fundamental impact the experience of
reading has on us. In reading, language provides us with a world
and meaning becomes perceptible. We can connect with another
subjectivity, another place, another time. At its most extreme,
reading changes our understanding of the world around us. Metanoia-
meaning literally a change of mind or a conversion-refers to this
kind of new way of seeing. To see the world in a new light is to
accept that our thinking has been irrevocably transformed. How is
that possible? And is it merely an intellectual process without any
impact on the world outside our brains? Innovatively tackling these
questions, this book mobilizes discussions from linguistics,
literary theory, philosophy of language, and cognitive science. It
re-articulates linguistic consciousness by underlining the poetic,
creative moment of language and sheds light on the ability of
language to transform not only our thinking but the world around us
as well.
The invention of the present-tense novel is a literary event whose
importance is on par with the discovery of perspective in painting.
From the first novels shaped by interior monologues and the use of
the present tense in the tradition of modernism, the present tense
has, over the course of its century-long evolution, changed the
conditions of fictional narration, along with our conceptions of
time in a philosophical and linguistic framework. Indeed, to
understand the work of an increasing number of contemporary writers
- J.M. Coetzee, Tom McCarthy, Thomas Pynchon, to name only a few -
it is necessary to both understand the distinct linguistic and
literary qualities of the present tense as well as its historical
transformation into a genuine tense of contemporary storytelling.
For the first time in literary scholarship, Present Tense: A
Poetics offers an account of a profound development in 20th- and
21st-century fiction.
This minutely detailed examination of a supposedly small
grammatical detail, the use of the present tense, opens up new
perspectives on a founding myth of the aesthetics of modernity: the
longing for presence. This collection approaches the issue by
documenting how the present tense became dominant in the 20th
century novel. The authors draw on perspectives in fiction theory
and narratology to delineate facets of this fundamental shift in
literary aesthetics from the past tense to the present.
The invention of the present-tense novel is a literary event whose
importance is on par with the discovery of perspective in painting.
From the first novels shaped by interior monologues and the use of
the present tense in the tradition of modernism, the present tense
has, over the course of its century-long evolution, changed the
conditions of fictional narration, along with our conceptions of
time in a philosophical and linguistic framework. Indeed, to
understand the work of an increasing number of contemporary writers
- J.M. Coetzee, Tom McCarthy, Thomas Pynchon, to name only a few -
it is necessary to both understand the distinct linguistic and
literary qualities of the present tense as well as its historical
transformation into a genuine tense of contemporary storytelling.
For the first time in literary scholarship, Present Tense: A
Poetics offers an account of a profound development in 20th- and
21st-century fiction.
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