Results for 'historical fiction'

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  1. Jill Lepore “Just the Facts, Ma'am,” March 24, 2008. A history of history and fiction.Elizabeth Barnes, W. B. Berthoff, Charles Brockden Brown’S. Historical‘Sketches & Leo Braudy - 1985 - Journal of the History of Ideas 46:405-416.
     
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  2. Historical fiction and the future of academic history.David Harlan - 2007 - In Keith Jenkins, Sue Morgan & Alun Munslow (eds.), Manifestos for history. New York: Routledge.
  3.  17
    Historical Facts and Historical Fictions.Peter Burke - 1994 - Filozofski Vestnik 15 (2).
    This article discusses the similarities and differences between what might be called two »crises of historical consciousness« in the late 17th and the late 20th, the first engendered by a combination of philosophical scepticism with new techniques for questioning the credibility of historical sources and detecting forgeries, the second in our crisis. The result is a widespread cultural relativism to which the debates on colonialism and feminism as well as the practice of anthropology and literary theory have contributed. (...)
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  4.  31
    Historical Fiction as Sociological Interpretation and Philosophy: on the Two Methodological Registers of W. E. B. Du Bois' The Black Flame[REVIEW]Amir Jaima - 2017 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 53 (4):584.
    Between 1957 and 1961, W. E. B. Du Bois wrote a lengthy work of historical fiction, a trilogy collectively titled The Black Flame. Through the lenses of four American families, the narrative offers an illuminating glimpse into the American, political drama of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, focusing on the degree to which “the negro problem” featured in important decisions and events. Reiterating ideas found in his other works—like Black Reconstruction —the narrative foregrounds the gravity of (...)
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  5.  36
    Fictional History and Historical Fiction: Solzhenitsyn and Kis as Exemplars.Matt F. Oja - 1988 - History and Theory 27 (2):111-124.
    Narrative history and narrative fiction can be thought of as opposite ends of a single theoretical continuum. Much of the literature on Stalin's purges and the rise of the Soviet gulag system, however, seems to be something more than fiction, yet less than strict historiography. There are five criteria which ease the difficulty in determining whether a given work is history or fiction: the qualitative degrees of truth, the scope of the work, the purpose of the work, (...)
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  6.  23
    James, Cather, Vollmann, and the Distinction of Historical Fiction.Robert L. Caserio - 2004 - Symploke 12 (1):106-129.
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  7.  9
    Horatio the Hero: The Depiction of Horatio Nelson in Contemporary Historical Fiction.Martha F. Bowden - 2010 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 29:129.
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  8.  8
    Victorian Reformations: Historical Fiction and Religious Controversy, 1820–1900. By Miriam Elizabeth Burstein . Pp. x, 300, Notre Dame, Indiana, University of Notre Dame Press, 2014, £24.36. [REVIEW]Peter Milward - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (2):340-341.
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  9.  15
    Victorian Reformations: Historical Fiction and Religious Controversy, 1820‐1900. By Miriam Elizabeth Burstein. Pp. x, 300, Notre Dame, Indiana, University of Notre Dame Press, 2014, $45.00. [REVIEW]Peter Milward - 2018 - Heythrop Journal 59 (2):319-320.
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  10.  13
    Katherine Cooper and Emma Short (eds) The female figure in contemporary historical fiction[REVIEW]Emma Young - 2014 - Feminist Theory 15 (2):213-215.
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  11.  51
    Historical Antirealism and the Past as a Fictional Model.David černín - 2019 - Organon F: Medzinárodný Časopis Pre Analytickú Filozofiu 26 (4):635-659.
    This paper focuses on the discipline of history, its methods, subject, and output. A brief overview of contemporary analytic philosophy of history is provided, followed by critical discussion of historical realism. It is argued that the insistence on the idea that historians inquire into the real past and that they refer to the actual past entities, events, or agents is widely open to sceptical objections. The concept of an abstract historical chronicle of past events which are explained or (...)
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  12. History, Fiction and Human Time: historical Imagination and Historical responsibility.David Carr - 2004 - In David Carr, Thomas R. Flynn & Rudolf A. Makkreel (eds.), The Ethics of History. Northwestern University Press. pp. 247--260.
     
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  13.  20
    A Historical Note on Women's Fiction: A Reply to Annette Kolodny.Beverly Voloshin - 1976 - Critical Inquiry 2 (4):817-820.
    While I appreciate Annette Kolodny's attempt to clarify the aims of feminist criticism, I would like to correct a historical misconception in her recent article, "Some Notes on Defining A 'Feminist Literary Criticism.'" When Kolodny comes to defining a feminist criticism, near the end of the essay, she advocates applying to individual works, without preconceived conclusions, "rigorous methods for analyzing style and image.” . . . Kolodny implies that Hawthorne wrongly condemned domestic novels without having read them and that (...)
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  14.  24
    Science fiction as a value scenario for historical technology.Ian S. King - 2021 - Ethics and Information Technology 23 (1):69-73.
    The value scenario is a useful tool in the sheaf of methods within value sensitive design. When envisioning new technology, this tool supports the designer in speculatively considering relevant stakeholders, values expressed or rebuffed by an artifact’s design, and tensions that may exist between those values. This paper explores how science fiction stories can serve as value scenarios to supplement traditional historical methods, especially when informants are no longer accessible.
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  15.  40
    Historical Inaccuracy in Fiction.Iskra Fileva - 2019 - American Philosophical Quarterly 56 (2):155-170.
    I ask whether and when historical inaccuracy in a work of art constitutes an aesthetic flaw. I first consider a few replies derived from others: conceptual impossibility, import-export inconsistency, failure of reference, and imaginative resistance. I argue that while there is a grain of truth to some of these proposals, none of them ultimately succeeds. I proceed to offer an alternative account on which the aesthetic demerits of historical inaccuracies stem from a violation of the conversational contract between (...)
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  16.  4
    Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction Literature.Miguel Ángel Fernández-Delgado - 2006 - Utopian Studies 17 (2):373-375.
  17. Holocaust Fiction and National Historical Memory: Elie Wiesel, The Fifth Son.Harold P. Maltz - forthcoming - Theoria.
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  18. Fictions That Don’t Tell the Truth.Neri Marsili - forthcoming - Philosophical Studies:1-22.
    Can fictions lie? According to a classic conception, works of fiction cannot contain lies, since their content is neither presented as true nor meant to deceive us. But this classic view can be challenged. Sometimes fictions appear to make claims about the actual world, and these claims can be designed to convey falsehoods, historical misconceptions, and pernicious stereotypes. Should we conclude that some fictional statements are lies? This article presents two views that support a positive answer, and two (...)
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  19.  17
    The Legal Fiction in Criminal Proceedings – Is it Historical Anachronism or Objectively Conditional Necessity?Artūras Panomariovas - 2011 - Jurisprudencija: Mokslo darbu žurnalas 18 (2):725-738.
    Quite often, for one or the other purpose, the fact (or phenomenon) that does not exist is presented to the society or individuals as the real, really existing although it (the fact or phenomenon) simply does not exist in the real life. And often the term “fiction” is used to describe such phenomena. Although fiction is considered an inseparable companion of a social life, the question arises what the actual (true) fiction is and whether the use of (...)
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  20.  16
    Reinventing a Past: Historical Author Figures in Recent Postmodern Fiction.Marcel Cornis-Pope - 2010 - Symploke 18 (1-2):309-315.
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  21.  17
    Fiction updated: theories of fictionality, narratology, and poetics.Calin Andrei Mihailescu & Walid Hamarneh (eds.) - 1996 - Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
    "Novels, movies, and lies - these are all fictions that provoke with their as ifs and what ifs. In response to the idea that fiction has somehow become an unfashionable topic in contemporary criticism, this volume argues that the question of fiction needs to be updated in the absence of a widely accepted theory of truth. This collection, dedicated to the noted scholar and literary critic Lubomir Dolezel, covers an extensive number of theoretical and historical issues relevant (...)
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  22.  10
    Ursula Le Guin’s Speculative Anthropology: Thick Description, Historicity and Science Fiction.Daniel Davison-Vecchione & Sean Seeger - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (7-8):119-140.
    This article argues that Ursula Le Guin’s science fiction is a form of ‘speculative anthropology’ that reconciles thick description and historicity. Like Clifford Geertz’s ethnographic writings, Le Guin’s science fiction utilises thick description to place the reader within unfamiliar social worlds rendered with extraordinary phenomenological fluency. At the same time, by incorporating social antagonisms, cultural contestation, and historical contingency, Le Guin never allows thick description to neutralise historicity. Rather, by combining the two and exploring their interplay, Le (...)
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  23.  13
    Seneca Falls Inheritance : Disentangling Women, Legislation and Violence in Monfredo's Historical Crime Fiction.Rosemary Erickson Johnsen - 2000 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 7 (1):58-78.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:SENECA FALLS INHERITANCE: DISENTANGLING WOMEN, LEGISLATION AND VIOLENCE IN MONFREDO'S HISTORICAL CRIME FICTION Rosemary Erickson Johnsen National Coalition ofIndependent Scholars That men were not prevented by courts or clergy from mistreating their wives meant that, to society's institutions, women had no value. A man could be jailed, even hanged, for stealing another man's horse, but not even reproached for beating his wife. (Miriam Grace Monfredo, Through a (...)
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  24.  50
    Historical Narrative: A Dispute Between Constructionism and Scientific Realism.Václav Černík & Jozef Viceník - 2009 - Human Affairs 19 (2):182-193.
    Historical Narrative: A Dispute Between Constructionism and Scientific Realism An intense discussion about the issue of historical narrative arose during the time when the naïve realism of classical historiography was being critiqued and led to a dispute, in the last century, between constructionism and critical or scientific realism. We can distinguish between constructionism and noetic constructivism. According to ontological constructionism all facts are human constructions; according to noetic constructivism, our notions and theories are constructs with objective meaning (sense (...)
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  25.  1
    Pulp Fiction as Philosophy: Bad Faith, Authenticity, and the Path of the Righteous Man.Bradley Richards - 2022 - In David Kyle Johnson (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook of Popular Culture as Philosophy. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 1311-1325.
    Pulp Fiction is pulp and transcends pulp. As such, it is an authentic film. It is of its time, aware of the concrete reality of its historical context, teaming with cultural allusions. It is a self-conscious, postmodern pastiche, with a nonlinear narrative. But Pulp Fiction also transcends all of this. It celebrates morality, mercy, and forgiveness, and rewards authenticity of the deepest kind, requiring acknowledgment of our finite realities, our infinite nature, and God’s grace. Pulp Fiction (...)
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  26.  13
    Philosophical Fiction as World Literature.Aaron Castroverde - 2023 - Sartre Studies International 29 (2):59-78.
    This article will examine Jean Paul Sartre's Nausea from the perspectives of philosophical fiction and world literature. Philosophical fiction is a specific kind of literature that insists on its absolute modernity. However, the literary aspects of philosophical fiction place it within its political and historical context, thus threatening this pretense to universality. Our examination of Nausea will show the internal tension between philosophy and fiction and how the interplay of both of those elements informed the (...)
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  27.  82
    Science Fiction as a Genre.Enrico Terrone - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 79 (1):16-29.
    Regardless of whether one agrees or disagrees with Stacie Friend’s claim that fiction is a genre, her notion of genre can be fruitfully applied to a paradigmatic genre such as science fiction. This article deploys Friend’s notion of genre in order to improve the influential characterization of science fiction proposed by Darko Suvin and to defend it from a criticism recently raised by Simon Evnine. According to Suvin, a work of science fiction must concern “a fictional (...)
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  28.  12
    Fatal Fictions: Crime and Investigation in Law and Literature.Alison L. LaCroix, Richard H. McAdams & Martha Craven Nussbaum (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford University Press.
    Writers of fiction have always confronted topics of crime and punishment. This age-old fascination with crime on the part of both authors and readers is not surprising, given that criminal justice touches on so many political and psychological themes essential to literature, and comes equippedwith a trial process that contains its own dramatic structure. This volume explores this profound and enduring literary engagement with crime, investigation, and criminal justice. The collected essays explore three themes that connect the world of (...)
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  29.  13
    Literary texts and scientific tradition: fictions of historical culture.Bruno Flávio Lontra Fagundes - 2008 - Cultura:253-268.
    Este artigo aponta alguns dilemas e desafios colocados ao trabalho do historiador, hoje, pela longa tradição histórica cientificista herdada do século XIX, que pôs a História e Literatura em campos disciplinares rigorosamente separados. Através da análise dos procedimentos de composição e criação literária de João Guimarães Rosa em seu livro Grande Sertão:Veredas, este artigo procura argumentar em torno do valor de textos literários como textos que podem ajudar os historiadores na suplantação daqueles dilemas e desafios.
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  30.  24
    Existence, Fiction, Assumption: Meinongian Themes and the History of Austrian Philosophy.Marian David & Mauro Antonelli (eds.) - 2016 - Boston: De Gruyter.
    Meinong-Studies, Vol. 6, contains papers focusing on the connections between intentionality and nonexistent objects, presenting historical analyses on the background of Meinong’s philosophical position up to the Meinong-Russell-Debate. It also contains systematic studies of fictional characters, of Kripke’s alternative theory of fiction, and of the relevance of fictions playing the role of assumptions in scientific contexts. The volume is completed by biographical sketches of Christian von Ehrenfels, founder of Gestalt-theory and Meinong’s close friend, and of Ernst Mally, disciple (...)
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  31.  47
    Works of Fiction and Illocutionary Acts.Gregory Currie - 1986 - Philosophy and Literature 10 (2):304-308.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:WORKS OF FICTION AND ILLOCUTIONARY ACTS by Gregory Currie ii O peech act theory is remarkably unhelpful in explaining what ficOtion is." So says Kendall Walton.1 My purpose here is to showjust how wrong diis judgment is. Not that I want to endorse all die attempts there have been to connect fiction with the notion of a speech act. Elsewhere I have argued diat the most prominent (...)
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  32. A Long Day's Journey into Night: The Historicity of Human Existence Unfolding in Virginia Woolf's Fiction in The Existential Coordinates of the Human Condition: Poetic, Epic, Tragic. The Literary Genre.Ba Schlack - 1984 - Analecta Husserliana 18:209-224.
     
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  33. Science Fiction Double Feature: Trans Liberation on Twin Earth.B. R. George & R. A. Briggs - manuscript
    What is it to be a woman? What is it to be a man? We start by laying out desiderata for an analysis of 'woman' and 'man': descriptively, it should link these gender categories to sex biology without reducing them to sex biology, and politically, it should help us explain and combat traditional sexism while also allowing us to make sense of the activist view that gendering should be consensual. Using a Putnam-style 'Twin Earth' example, we argue that none of (...)
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  34.  52
    The Fiction of Economic Coercion: Political Marxism and the Separation of Theory and History.Sébastien Rioux - 2013 - Historical Materialism 21 (4):92-128.
    The theory of social-property relations, or political Marxism, has argued that in contradistinction with pre-capitalist forms of exploitation, capitalism is characterised by the separation of the economic and the political, which makes surplus appropriation under this system uniquely driven by economic coercion. In spite of political Marxism’s various strengths, this article argues that the paradigm puts forward an ahistorical and sanitised conception of capitalism typical of bourgeois economics, which is an outcome of its formal-abstractionist approach to the concept of the (...)
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  35.  10
    Fiction as False Document: The Reception of E.L. Doctorow in the Postmodern Age.John Williams - 1996 - Camden House (NY).
    Survey of the reception history of E.L. Doctorow, the controversial American author.
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  36.  9
    "Fiction and the Shape of Belief": Fifteen Years Later.James R. Kincaid - 1979 - Critical Inquiry 6 (2):209-219.
    What so many readers—whether "sensitive and intelligent" and comprising "generations" I do not know—have found in Fiction and the Shape of Belief is sheer delight in the rigor and shrewdness of the argument. The most formidable part of Sacks' book is precisely what one would at first necessarily consider the soft spot: the relations of "belief" to fictional form. If one allows the assumptions about a stable and controllable language implicit in the argument and then perhaps substitutes a Boothian (...)
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  37. Fictional Objects.Glen R. Koehn - 1996 - Dissertation, University of Waterloo (Canada)
    The dissertation explores certain puzzles about fiction and existence. Some historical discussion of Brentano, Meinong and Russell sets the stage for an extended account of three neo-Meinongian semantic theories: those of Terence Parsons, Richard Routley , and Edward Zalta. It is argued that these authors rely on a false understanding of fiction. A distinction between setting out linguistic precedents in storytelling and following such precedents helps allow for the notion of being true in a story. However, fictional (...)
     
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  38. The Puzzle of Historical Criticism.Christopher Bartel - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 70 (2):213-222.
    Works of fiction are often criticized for their historical inaccuracies. But this practice poses a problem: why would we criticize a work of fiction for its historical inaccuracy given that it is a work of fiction? There is an intuition that historical inaccuracies in works of fiction diminish their value as works of fiction; and yet, given that they are works of fiction, there is also an intuition that such works should (...)
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  39.  26
    Fictional Characters, Real Problems: The Search for Ethical Content in Literature.Garry Hagberg (ed.) - 2016 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    Literature is a complex and multifaceted expression of our humanity, one dimension of which is ethical content. This striking collection of new essays pursues a fuller and richer understanding of five of the central aspects of this ethical content. These aspects are: the question of character, its formation, and its role in moral discernment; poetic vision in the context of ethical understanding; literature's distinctive role in self-identity and self-understanding; patterns of moral growth and change that emerge from the philosophical reading (...)
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  40.  51
    Scottish Utopian Fiction and the Invocation of God.Timothy C. Baker - 2010 - Utopian Studies 21 (1):91-117.
    Explicitly utopian novels are relatively uncommon in twentieth-century Scottish fiction, perhaps due to a prevailing conception of Scottish literature as inherently peripheral; for many critics and authors, Scotland is already a place outside the mainstream of political and historical narrative. Utopian themes and imagery, however, have frequently been used by Scottish writers to address the role of religious experience in contemporary life. In novels by Robin Jenkins, Neil M. Gunn, Alasdair Gray, and Iain M. Banks, the utopian form (...)
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  41.  7
    Is history fiction?Ann Curthoys - 2005 - Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Edited by John Docker.
    The title question becomes a rabbit-hole through which we tumble in search of an answer, encountering everyone from Herodotus to Humphrey Bogart along the way. Is History Fiction? is an invaluable guide on how to weld creative thinking and sound research into meaningful history, and how to understand the different arguments that have abounded throughout time regarding the nature of history. More than a book of theory about theory, this innovative work is an asset to the undergraduate classroom and (...)
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  42.  12
    Literary Testimonies and Fictional Experiences: Gulag Literature Between Facts and Fiction.Lovisa Andén - 2021 - Studia Phaenomenologica 21:197-223.
    This article discusses the role of Gulag literature in connection to testimony, literature and historical documentation. Drawing on the thoughts of Jacques Derrida and Hannah Arendt, the article examines the difficulty of witnesses being believed in the absence of evidence. In particular, the article focuses on the vulnerability of the Gulag authors, due to the ongoing Soviet repression at the time of their writing. It examines the interplay between the repression and the literature that exposed it. The article contends (...)
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  43.  91
    Truth in Fiction: A Reexamination of Audiences.Peter J. Rabinowitz - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 4 (1):121-141.
    Questions about the status of literary truth are as old as literary criticism, but they have become both more intricate and more compelling as literature has grown progressively more self-conscious and labyrinthian in its dealings with "reality." One might perhaps read The Iliad or even David Copperfield without raising such issues. But authors like Gide , Nabokov, Borges, and Robbe-Grillet seem continually to remind their readers of the complex nature of literary truth. How, for instance, are we to deal with (...)
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  44. The Fictions of Free Labour: Contract, Coercion, and So-Called Unfree Labour.Jairus Banaji - 2003 - Historical Materialism 11 (3):69-95.
  45.  25
    The ecology of Victorian fiction.Joseph Carroll - 2001 - Philosophy and Literature 25 (2):295-313.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Literature 25.2 (2001) 295-313 [Access article in PDF] The Ecology of Victorian Fiction Joseph Carroll I In the past ten years or so, ecological literary criticism--that is, criticism concentrating on the relationship between literature and the natural environment--has become one of the fastest-growing areas in literary study. Ecocritics now have their own professional association, their own academic journal, and an impressive bibliography of scholarly studies. Ecocritical (...)
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  46.  34
    Philosophy Through Science Fiction: A Coursebook with Readings.Ryan Nichols, Nicholas D. Smith & Fred Dycus Miller (eds.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    _Philosophy Through Science Fiction_ offers a fun, challenging, and accessible way in to the issues of philosophy through the genre of science fiction. Tackling problems such as the possibility of time travel, or what makes someone the same person over time, the authors take a four-pronged approach to each issue, providing · a clear and concise introduction to each subject · a science fiction story that exemplifies a feature of the philosophical discussion · historical and contemporary philosophical (...)
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  47.  5
    Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity by Suparno Banerjee (review).Barnita Bagchi - 2024 - Utopian Studies 34 (3):586-590.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity by Suparno BanerjeeBarnita BagchiSuparno Banerjee. Indian Science Fiction: Patterns, History and Hybridity. Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2020. xiii + 256 pp. E-book, ISBN 9781786836670.Suparno Banerjee’s monograph examines science fiction (henceforth SF) from India, a country that has a rich and fascinating tradition of SF. This is a book that will be of interest and value to scholars (...)
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  48.  41
    Between fiction and reflection: Foucault and the experience-book. [REVIEW]Timothy Rayner - 2003 - Continental Philosophy Review 36 (1):27-43.
    Foucault notoriously suggests that his historical analyses are fictions. Commentators typically interpret this claim in a negative light to mean that Foucault's works are not, strictly speaking, true. In this paper, I present a positive interpretation of Foucault's claim, basing my argument on a hitherto marginalized aspect of his work: the experience-book. An experience-book is defined as a use of fiction in the practice of critique with desubjectifying effects. My argument for this interpretation proceeds in three steps. First, (...)
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  49.  20
    Socio-historical Causal Descriptivism.Chen Bo - 2016 - Croatian Journal of Philosophy 16 (1):45-67.
    This paper argues for a hybrid and alternative theory of names—Socio-historical Causal Descriptivism, which consists of six claims: (1) the referring relation between a name and an object originates from a generalized “initial baptism” of that object. (2) The causal chain of the name N firstly and mainly transmits informative descriptions of N’s bearer. (3) The meaning of N consists of an open-ended collection of informative descriptions of N’s bearer acknowledged by a linguistic community. (4) With respect to practical (...)
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  50.  8
    Existential science fiction.Ryan Lizardi - 2022 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    This book explores contemporary existential science fiction media and their influence on society's conceptions of humanity. These media texts manifest abstract concepts in a genre that has historically focused on exploring new ideas and frontiers, creating powerful media that helps audiences contemplate their existence as human beings.
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