Title of article :
Intentions and Interpretations: Philosophical Fiction as Conversation
Author/Authors :
Jukka Mikkonen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Appeals to the actual authorʹs intention in order to legitimate an interpretation of a work of literary narrative fiction have generally been considered extraneous in Anglo-American philosophy of literature since Wimsatt and Beardsleyʹs well-known manifesto from the 1940s. For over sixty years now so-called anti-intentionalists have argued that the authorʹs intentions - plans, aims, and purposes considering her work - are highly irrelevant to interpretation. In this paper, I shall argue that the relevance of the actual authorʹs intentions varies in different approaches to fiction, and suggest that fictions are legitimately interpreted intentionally as conversations in a certain kind of reading. My aim is to show that the so-called conversational approach is valid when emphasizing the cognitive content of a fiction and truths it seem to convey, for example, in a philosophical approach to fictions which contain philosophical purport using Sartreʹs fictional works as paradigmatic, and that anti-intentionalistsʹ arguments against intentionalism do not threaten such an approach.
Keywords :
anti-intentionalism , Conversation , Fiction , hypothetical intentionalism , interpretation , philosophy , Intention , actual intentionalism
Journal title :
Contemporary Aesthetics
Journal title :
Contemporary Aesthetics