Experiencing Fiction: Judgments, Progressions, and the Rhetorical Theory of Narrative (THEORY INTERPRETATION NARRATIV)
Book Details
Author(s)Dr. James Phelan
PublisherOhio State University Press
ISBN / ASIN0814291457
ISBN-139780814291450
AvailabilityIn stock. Usually ships within 2 to 3 days.
Sales Rank9,016,403
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
In Experiencing Fiction, James Phelan develops a provocative and engaging affirmative answer to the question, Can we experience narrative fiction in similar ways? Phelan grounds that answer in two elements of narrative located at the intersection between authorial design and reader response: judgments and progressions. Phelan contends that focusing on the three main kinds of judgment interpretive, ethical, and aesthetic and on the principles underlying a narrative s movement from beginning to end reveals the experience of reading fiction to be potentially sharable. In Part One, Phelan skillfully analyzes progressions and judgments in narratives with a high degree of narrativity: Jane Austen s Persuasion, Toni Morrison s Beloved, Edith Wharton s Roman Fever, and Ian McEwan s Atonement. In Part Two, Phelan turns his attention to the different relationships between judgments and progressions in hybrid forms in the lyric narratives of Ernest Hemingway s A Clean, Well-Lighted Place, Sandra Cisneros s Woman Hollering Creek, and Robert Frost s Home Burial, and in the portrait narratives of Alice Munro s Prue and Ann Beattie s Janus. More generally, Phelan moves back and forth between the exploration of theoretical principles and the detailed work of interpretation. As a result, Experiencing Fiction combines Phelan s fresh and compelling readings of numerous innovative narratives with his fullest articulation of the rhetorical theory of narrative.
