Six Walks in the Fictional Woods (The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures Book 59)

★★★★★ 4.3 35 reviews

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Management number 233559800 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$7.60 Model Number 233559800
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“Erudite, wide-ranging, and slyly humorous.” —The AtlanticOne of the great novelists and public intellectuals of our time gives a master class on the philosophy of fiction.Umberto Eco was fond of pointing out that all writing is narrative. He published his famed debut novel The Name of the Rose when he was forty-eight years old, yet he believed that everything he had written to that point—from treatises on semiotics to essays on mass culture—took the form of a story. To Eco, scholarship, much like fiction, was shaped by narrative. It was the stuff of life itself.Six Walks in the Fictional Woods, a collection of essays based on Eco’s 1992–1993 Norton Lectures at Harvard, illuminates fiction’s porous boundaries—in particular, the myriad ways that literary works conscript readers’ experiences and expectations. Fiction, says Eco, can offer metaphysical comfort by appealing to our desire for a smaller, more legible world, one that gives a definitive answer to the question of “whodunnit?” But it also makes demands of us, presupposing a model reader who possesses the cultural knowledge necessary to interpret the text, as well as a willingness to follow the never-quite-specified rules of the literary game.Whether he is dissecting grammatical ambiguities in Gérard de Nerval’s nineteenth-century romantic masterpiece Sylvie, studying the rhythms of Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels, or tracing the web of fraud and misattribution that produced the antisemitic conspiracy theory of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, this is Eco at his very best: intellectually omnivorous, endlessly fascinated by hoaxes, and always an adept navigator of the narrative forests that surround us. Read more

ASIN B0FDGXCWT9
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-0674302952
Language English
File size 5.1 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher Belknap Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 177 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Part of series The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures
Publication date September 16, 2025
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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