Basis of genre in a literary novel
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Basis of genre in a literary novel
Annotation
PII
S2072-07260000616-6-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Pages
118-137
Abstract
This essay provides a critical analysis regarding the basis of genre distinction in a literary novel: What is the epistemological and ontological locus of this basis? The thesis the au­thor elucidates and defends is that theme constitutes the basis of genre distinction in a lit­erary novel; it exists as a potentiality in the literary dimension of the novel qua signifi­cant form. This paper is composed of three parts. The first part focuses on the basis un­derlying the literary dimension of the novel, namely, art: possession of aesthetic qualities is what renders a novel a literary work of art. The second part argues that, as the basis of genre distinction, theme exists as a potentiality in the literary dimension of the novel. The third part illustrates in some detail how theme comes to life as a world of meaning in the aesthetic experience. If possession of aesthetic qualities is what renders a novel a literary work of art, if the literary dimension inheres in the novel as a potentiality capa­ble of significant form, if theme exists in the literary dimension of a novel, it should fol­low that theme does not exist in the novel as a story but as a literary work, that is, as a po­tentiality in its literary dimension and nowhere else. Accordingly, the literary work of art should, and can, declare its genre identity.
Keywords
novel, genre, art, literature, aesthetic quality, world of meaning, aesthetic ob­ject, value, literariness, philosophicalness
Date of publication
01.03.2020
Number of purchasers
22
Views
552
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0.0 (0 votes)
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References



Additional sources and materials

  1. Bell, C. Art. New York: Capricorn Books, 1958. 190 pp.
  2. Ingarden, R. The Literary Work of Art. Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1979. xxxiii, 415 pp.
  3. Kuczynska, A. “Art as a Philosophy,” Dialogue and Universalism, 2018, Vol. 28, No. 1, pp. 9‒150.
  4. Mitias, M. (ed.) The Possibility of the Aesthetic Experience. Dordrecht; Boston: M. Nijhoff; Norwell, MA: Kluwer Academic, 1986. ix, 171 pp.
  5. Mitias, M. What Makes an Experience Aesthetic? Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1988. 154 pp.
  6. Mitias, M. The Philosopher and the Devil. London: Olympia, 2018. 238 pp.
  7. Osborne, H. “What Makes an Experience Aesthetic?” The Possibility of the Aesthetic Experi­ence, ed. by M.H. Mitias. Dordrecht; Boston: M. Nijhoff; Norwell, MA: Kluwer Aca­demic, 1986, pp. 117‒138.
  8. Porter, B. Philosophy Through Fiction and Film. Upper Sadler River: Pearson Prentice-Hall, 2004. xv, 426 pp.

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