Pretending and Meaning: Toward a Pragmatic
Theory of Fictional Discourse.
Contributions in Philosophy, vol. 57. Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1996.
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Since
Plato, Western critics of literature have asked how it is possible for fiction
writers to mean something serious. The outrage over Salman Rushdie's The
Satanic Verses, published in 1988, highlighted our continued uneasiness
over distinctions between fact and fiction, novel and history, truth and
falsehood. The blasphemy charged against Rushdie raises important questions:
Did Rushdie mean The Satanic Verses, or didn't he? When he publicly recanted,
what did he mean? What do we even mean by "mean"?
This is the
starting point for Richard Henry's fascinating investigation of the pragmatic
foundations of fictional discourse. Drawing from Paul Grice's interrogation
of meaning and implicature, Henry offers a systematic correlation between
what it is to pretend and what it is to mean, how the two concepts inform
each other, and how it is possible to mean seriously and sincerely by
purportedly pretended acts. Pretending and Meaning: Toward a Pragmatic
Theory of Fictional Discourse draws upon Paul Grice's interrogation of
meaning and implicature to offer a systematic correlation between what
it is to pretend and what it is to mean, how the two concepts inform each
other, and how it is possible to mean seriously and sincerely by purportedly
pretended acts. |