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Travelling Concepts: New Fictionality Studies New edition [Kietas viršelis]

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This collection of essays is based on the cooperation between the Freiburg graduate school Factual and Fictional Narration and the Aarhus Centre of Fictionality Studies. It re-examines the much discussed fact fiction distinction in light of the current burgeoning of research on fictionality.



This volume is co-edited by the director of the Freiburg graduate school "Factual and Fictional Narration" (GRK 1767, Freiburg/Germany) and the director of the Aarhus Centre for Fictionality Studies (University of Aarhus, DK). The collection of essays re-examines the much discussed fact fiction distinction in light of the current burgeoning of research on fictionality. It provides a forum for ongoing work on fictionality from France, Germany and Denmark and Sweden. By placing discussions of the notion of fictionality in one volume, the editors hope to initiate exchange between the different traditions represented in the essays und to help the task of translating the available concepts and terminologies so they can travel between different models and theoretical frameworks.

List of Contributors
7(2)
Travelling Concepts: New Fictionality Studies. An Introduction
9(16)
Monika Fludernik
Henrik Skov Nielsen
Invention and Fictionality
25(20)
Frank Zipfel
Contested Inventions: Fictionality and Ethics
45(24)
Johannes Franzen
The Frontiers between Fact and Fiction in the Light of Tridimensional Comparatism
69(22)
Francoise Lavocat
Fictionality before Fictionality? Historicizing a Modern Concept
91(24)
Eva von Contzen
Stefan Tilg
Inventing History: Fictionality in the Historical Novel in Britain and Denmark
115(22)
Simona Zetterberg Gjerlevsen
Authors, Fictional Narrators, and Literary Appreciation
137(24)
Tobias Klauk
Tilmann Koppe
Factuality and Fictionality in `Fake News'
161(18)
Henrik Skov Nielsen
Contributors 179
Monika Fludernik is Professor of English Literature at the University of Freiburg in Germany. She has worked in the areas of narratology, postcolonial literary theory, law and literature studies and the eighteenth century. Her two most recent publications are Metaphors of Confinement: The Prison in Fact, Fiction, and Fantasy (Oxford Univ. Press, 2019) and (with Marie-Laure Ryan) the handbook Narrative Factuality (de Gruyter, 2019).



Henrik Skov Nielsen is a professor at Aarhus University. His research has attempted to contribute to conversations about mainly three areas of narrative theory: first person narration; unnatural narratology; and fictionality. Sample publications in English include "Ten Theses about Fictionality" with James Phelan and Richard Walsh (in Narrative January 2015) and Narratology and Ideology edited with Divya Dwivedi and Richard Walsh, which was recently published by OSU press. He heads the research group Narrative Research Lab (http://nordisk.au.dk/forskning/forskningscentre/nrl/intro/), and "Centre for Fictionality Studies" (http://fictionality.au.dk/).