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Moving Worlds: Fictionality and Illusion after Coleridge
Author(s) -
Garratt Peter
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
literature compass
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.158
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 1741-4113
DOI - 10.1111/j.1741-4113.2012.00908.x
Subject(s) - illusion , volition (linguistics) , criticism , relation (database) , phrase , reading (process) , literature , mill , philosophy , aesthetics , psychology , art , history , linguistics , cognitive psychology , archaeology , database , computer science
This article examines Victorian philosophical responses to fictional worlds. It revisits Coleridge’s coinage of the ‘willing suspension of disbelief’, a phrase still taken to be an explanation of the mind’s inner experience of fictionality, before focusing on volition and illusion in John Stuart Mill, G. H. Lewes and James Sully. It ends by positioning these aspects of nineteenth‐century intellectual culture in relation to a recent revival of interest in reading practices and ‘cognitive’ literary criticism.

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