This book provides and defends an analysis of our concept of the meaning of a literary work. P. D. Juhl challenges a number of widely held views concerning the role of an author's intention: the distinction between the real and the implied" author; and the question of whether a work has not one correct, but many acceptable interpretations.
Originally published in 1981.
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Autorentext
Peter D. Juhl
Inhalt
- FrontMatter,
- CONTENTS,
- PREFACE,
- I. Introduction,
- II. The Theory of E. D. Hirsch,
- III. Is Evidence of the Author's Intention Irrelevant?,
- IV. The Appeal to the Text: What Are We Appealing to?,
- V. Context and the Rules of the Language,
- VI. Aesthetic Arguments and Other Aspects of Critical Practice,
- VII. Life, Literature, and the Implied Author : Can (Fictional) Literary Works Make Truth-Claims?,
- VIII. Does a Literary Work Have One and ONLY ONE CORRECT INTERPRETATION?,
- APPENDIX. The Doctrine of Verstehen and the OBJECTIVITY OF LITERARY INTERPRETATIONS,
- Bibliography,
- Index,