•  40
    Fearing fictions
    Journal of Philosophy 75 (1): 5-27. 1978.
  •  11
    Style and the Products and Processes of Art
    In Leonard B. Meyer & Berel Lang (eds.), The Concept of style, University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 45--66. 1979.
  •  156
    Are Representations Symbols?
    The Monist 58 (2): 236-254. 1974.
    The representational arts seem friendly territory for “symbol” theories of aesthetics. Much of the initial resistance one may feel to the idea that a Mondrian composition or a Scarlatti sonata is a symbol evaporates when we switch to a portrait of Mozart, Michelangelo’s Pietá, or Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities. These representational works have reference to things outside themselves. The portrait is a picture of Mozart; the Pietá is a sculpture of Christ and his Mother; A Tale of Two Cities is a…Read more
  •  7
    The reader's access to the fictional world of a novel is mediated by the narrator, when there is one; the fictional world is presented from the narrator's perspective. do depictions ever have anything comparable to narrators? apparent artists sometimes have a certain perspective on the fictional world. but they don't mediate our access to it; the fictional world is presented independently of their perspective on it. depictions do present fictional worlds from certain perspectives, but not usuall…Read more
  •  5
    Not a leg to stand on the roof on
    Journal of Philosophy 70 (19): 725-726. 1973.
  •  81
    Mimesis as Make-Believe is important reading for everyone interested in the workings of representational art.
  •  22
    How remote are fictional worlds from the real world?
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 37 (1): 11-23. 1978.
  •  34
    Review of Works and Worlds of Arts by Nicholas Wolterstorff (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 80 (3): 179-193. 1983.