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Handke's Kaspar, Wittgenstein's Tractatus, and the successful representation of alienationJournal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism 9 (2): 3-26. 1995.An investigation of Handke's play by means of an analysis of the elements of the Tractatus, known to have influenced Handke at the time he wrote Kaspar. This approach yields a much more plausible account of Handke's representation of his central character's alienation than are available from now-standard semiotic and post-structuralist analyses.
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Narrative, Fiction, ImaginationIn M. M. P. Sabates Pokorny Kotatko (ed.), Fictionality-Possibility-Reality, . 2010.Hamilton argues that narratives engage our imaginations not so much by having us pretend the events they depict are true or present as by having us engage in a kind of anticipation of events to come. The idea is that the grasp of a narratively structured presentation is explained in very much the same way any sequence of events, considered as a sequence, is grasped.
Manhattan, Kansas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Aesthetics |
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Aesthetics |
| Philosophy of Cognitive Science |