Making Believe

Dialogue 32 (2):359- (1993)
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Abstract

Kendall Walton's Mimesis as Make-Believe is the most significant event in Anglo-American aesthetics in many a year, and joins a small pantheon of landmark books such as Nelson Goodman's Languages of Art, Richard Wollheim's Art and Its Objects and Arthur Danto's Transfiguration of the Commonplace. Walton's aim is to provide a comprehensive account of the representational arts—literature, drama, cinema, painting, drawing, sculpture—from both the generative and the receptive points of view. That is to say, he attempts to explain how representations are fashioned, what their representational status consists in, how representations are apprehended and what the experience of them characteristically involves. Inthese aims he is to my mind enormously, if not completely, successful.

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Jerrold Levinson
University of Maryland, College Park

Citations of this work

A Defense of Presentism.Ned Markosian - 2004 - Oxford Studies in Metaphysics 1:47-82.
Much ado about nothing: Critical realism examined.Richard Hanley - 2003 - Philosophical Studies 115 (2):123 - 147.

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References found in this work

Creatures of Fiction.Peter van Inwagen - 1977 - American Philosophical Quarterly 14 (4):299 - 308.
What a musical work is.Jerrold Levinson - 1980 - Journal of Philosophy 77 (1):5-28.
Fear, fiction and make-believe.Alex Neill - 1991 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 49 (1):47-56.
The place of real emotion in response to fictions.Jerrold Levinson - 1990 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (1):79-80.

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