The Implied Reader: Patterns of Communication in Prose Fiction from Bunyan to Beckett

by Wolfgang Iser

Paperback, 1978

Status

Available

Call number

809.3

Publication

Johns Hopkins University Press (1978), 318 pages

Description

Like no other art form, the novel confronts its readers with circumstances arising from their own environment of social and historical norms and stimulates them to assess and criticize their surroundings. By analyzing major works of English fiction ranging from Bunyan, Fielding, Scott, and Thackeray to Joyce and Beckett, renowned critic Wolfgang Iser here provides a framework for a theory of such literary effects and aesthetic responses. Iser's focus is on the theme of discovery, whereby the reader is given the chance to recognize the deficiencies of his own existence and the suggested solutions to counterbalance them. The content and form of this discovery is the calculated response of the reader -- the implied reader. In discovering the expectations and presuppositions that underlie all his perceptions, the reader learns to read himself as he does the text.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

318 p.; 6 inches

ISBN

0801821509 / 9780801821509

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