Extracting fictional truth from unreliable sources

In Emar Maier & Andreas Stokke (eds.), The Language of Fiction. Oxford: Oxford University Press (2021)
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Abstract

A fictional text is commonly viewed as constituting an invitation to play a certain game of make-believe, with the individual sentences written by the author providing the propositions we are to imagine and/or accept as true within the fiction. However, we can’t always take the text at face value. What narratologists call ‘unreliable narrators’ may present a confused or misleading picture of the fictional world. Meanwhile there has been a debate in philosophy about so-called ‘imaginative resistance’ in which we are inclined to resist imagining (or even accepting as true in the fiction) what’s explicitly stated in the text. But if we can’t take the text’s word for it, how do we determine what’s true in a fiction? We propose an account of fiction interpretation in a dynamic setting (a version of DRT with a mechanism for opening, updating, and closing temporary ‘workspaces’) and combine this framework with belief revision logic. With these tools in hand we turn to modelling imaginative resistance and unreliable narrators.

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Author Profiles

Emar Maier
University of Groningen
Merel Semeijn
Institut Jean Nicod

Citations of this work

Fictional Names and Co-Identification.Andreas Stokke - 2023 - Philosophers' Imprint 23:1-23.
Fiction and importation.Andreas Stokke - 2021 - Linguistics and Philosophy 45 (1):65-89.
Free Indirect Discourse in Non-Fiction.Andreas Stokke - 2021 - Frontiers in Communication 5 (606616).

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References found in this work

Assertion.Robert Stalnaker - 1978 - Syntax and Semantics (New York Academic Press) 9:315-332.
The Nature of Fiction.Gregory Currie - 1990 - Cambridge University Press.
Truth in fiction.David K. Lewis - 1978 - American Philosophical Quarterly 15 (1):37–46.
Meaning.Stephen R. Schiffer - 1972 - Oxford,: Clarendon Press.

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