The art of deceit: Pseudolus and the nature of reading

Classical Quarterly 46 (01):152- (1996)
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Abstract

Reading is delusion. In order to read, we have to suspend certain standards of reality and accept others; we have to offer ourselves to deceit, even if it is an act of deception of which we are acutely aware. One way of considering this paradoxical duality in the act of reading is more or less consciously to posit multiple levels of reading, whereby the deceived reader is watched by an aware reader, who is in turn watched by a super-reader; and so it continues. The ancient art critics, obsessed as they were with deceptive realism, provide in anecdotal form a good example of such multiplicity of perception when they tell stories of birds trying to peck at painted grapes, horses trying to mate with painted horses, even humans deceived by the lifelikeness of works of art. Such stories act as easy but potent signifiers of ‘realism’ in ancient art criticism, by showing the reactions of a ‘naive reader’ whose deception the aware reader can enter into but also see exposed. In verbal or visual art parading itself as realistic, the artistic pretence of a pose of reality is, at some level, intended to be seen as deceptive; when it is non-realistic, or anti-realistic, or even stubbornly abstract , art still demands that the reader suspend ordinary perception. But deception alone is not enough: ‘deceit’ only becomes artistic when a viewer sees through it, for a work of art which is so lifelike that no-one realizes it is not real has not entered the realm of art. The appreciation of deception happens at the moment when the deception is undone, or by the imaginative creation of a less sophisticated reader who has not seen through the deceit. That is what happens in comedy, more overtly than in other artforms, but in the same way

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Citations of this work

The fool's Errand in Terence's Hecyra.Justin Dwyer - 2023 - Classical Quarterly 73 (1):153-159.

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References found in this work

Legend, Myth, and Magic in the Image of the Artist: A Historical Experiment.Ernst Kris & Otto Kurz - 1981 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 39 (3):330-332.
Roman Laughter. The Comedy of Plautus.L. Richardson & Erich Segal - 1970 - American Journal of Philology 91 (3):370.
The Cook Scene of Plautus' Pseudolus.J. C. B. Lowe - 1985 - Classical Quarterly 35 (02):411-.
Aspects of Plautus' Originality in the Asinaria.J. C. B. Lowe - 1992 - Classical Quarterly 42 (01):152-.

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