Description
Dorrit Cohn provides us with a comprehensive survey of the controversy about the relation between factual and fictional narration, and shows how it might be resolved. As a reference-point (and perhaps a lightning-rod) for future discussion, the book will be required reading for narratologists, and will attract the attention of all those who teach fiction. -- Wallace MartinUniversity of Toledo, author of Recent Theories of Narrative and editor of The Yale Critics: Deconstruction in America
About the Author
Dorrit Cohn is a professor emerita of the Departments of German and Comparative Literature at Harvard University. Her previous books include The Sleepwalkers: Elucidations of Herman Broch's Trilogy and Transparent Minds: Narrative Modes for Presenting Consciousness in Fiction.
Reviews
Offers some very fine analysis of a range of narratives from Freud's case histories to Tolstoy's War and Peace... An important contribution to narrative theory and a salutary intervention in the debate about the relation between fiction and nonfiction... Cohn argues with clarity, learning, and patient logic. -- James Phelan Modern Fiction Studies The first chapter, which anatomizes the various meanings of the term 'fiction' in critical discourse, shows Cohn at her best, scrupulously and methodically distinguishing between shifting and rival senses of the term 'fiction.'. -- Brian Richardson Novel [T]his collection offers a convenient way of sampling the ideas of a well respected critic who has had substantial and lasting impact on narratological studies. -- Hollie Markland Harder French Review Dorrit Cohn demolishes, with remorseless and elegant clarity, the view, fashionable among some literary theorists, that there is ultimately no distinction between historical and fictional narrative. -- Michael Bell Yearbook of English Studies Elegantly written and demonstrates an impressive knowledge of scholarship in the theoretical field of narratology. -- Amy J. Elias Journal of English and Germanic Philology The Distinction of Fiction will [become] required reading for all those interested in the formal workings of narrative... Readers willing to trace and retrace the rigorous intricacies of Cohn's presentation will find that the effort leads to ample and even exhilarating rewards. -- Patrick O'Neill Seminar Careful and lucid theoretical work in narratology. -- Ursula Mahlendorf Colloquia Germanica
Awards
Winner of Modern Language Association Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize for Comparative Literary Studies 1999 (United States).
Book Information
ISBN 9780801865220
Author Dorrit Cohn
Format Paperback
Page Count 208
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 283g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 13mm