What distinguishes fiction from ordinary experience is not a lack of
reality but a surfeit of rationality - this was the thesis of
Aristotle’s Poetics. The rationality of fiction is that
appearances are inverted. Fiction overturns the ordinary course of
events that occur one after the other, aiming to show how the
unexpected arises, happiness transforms into unhappiness and ignorance
into knowledge.
In the modern age, argues Rancière, this fictional rationality was
developed in new ways. The social sciences extended the model of
causal linkage to all spheres of human action, seeking to show us how
causes produce their effects by inverting appearances and
expectations. Literature took the opposite path. Instead of
democratizing fictional rationality to include all human activity in
the world of rational knowledge, it destroyed its principles by
abolishing the limits that circumscribed a reality peculiar to
fiction. It aligned itself with the rhythms of everyday life and
plumbed the power of the “random moment” into which an entire life
is condensed.
In the avowed fictions of literature as well as in the unavowed
fictions of politics, social science or journalism, the central
question is the same: how to construct the perceptible forms of a
shared world. From Stendhal to João Guimarães Rosa and from Marx to
Sebald, via Balzac, Poe, Maupassant, Proust, Rilke, Conrad, Auerbach,
Faulkner and some others, this book explores these constructions and
sheds new light on the constitutive movement of modern fiction, the
movement that shifted its centre of gravity from its traditional core
toward those edges in which fiction gets confronted with its possible
revocation.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509530472
Publisert
2019
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Polity
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter