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FICTIONING SOCIAL THEORY: THE USE OF FICTION TO ENRICH, INFORM, AND CHALLENGE THE THEORETICAL IMAGINATION. Introduction
Author(s) -
Olli Pyyhtinen
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
digithum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.159
H-Index - 3
ISSN - 1575-2275
DOI - 10.7238/d.v0i24.3188
Subject(s) - storytelling , sociology , epistemology , poetics , scholarship , discipline , certainty , aesthetics , social science , philosophy , narrative , linguistics , political science , law , poetry
The introduction to the special issue taps into discussions about the inseparability of science and fiction. Commencing from the idea that scientific statements are distinguished from fiction only a posteriori, not a priori, the piece asks, how fiction could be used as a theoretical resource in social scientific thinking. Could it inform, enrich, extend, intensify, and challenge the sociological imagination? Besides rejecting any clear-cut separation of social science and fictional and artistic forms, the text seeks to unsettle our certainty as to what counts as “fact” and what as “fiction” in the first place. It also suggests that examining the relationship of sociology and fictional and artistic forms helps us unsettle the institutionalized disciplinary ways of ordering knowledge and thought and that there may be a poetics or fiction to be uncovered in sociological scholarship, as sociology is also a form of storytelling.

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