For the ubiquity

Abstract

Kania[1] has recently developed an argument which poses a serious challenge to the “ubiquity thesis†– the view that every literary narrative[2] necessarily has a fictional narrator.[3] Kania characterizes a fictional narrator as a (possibly non-human) agent who tells (or is responsible for) the narrative and who exists on “the same..

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manuscript Alward, Peter (manuscript) "For the ubiquity".

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Peter Alward
University of Saskatchewan

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