scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The Act of Reading: A Theory of Aesthetic Response

TLDR
Iser as discussed by the authors describes the "time flow" of reading, the "wandering viewpoint" which the reader must adopt in the "continual interplay between modified expectations and transformed memories" (p. 111).
Abstract
At the heart of this unnecessarily convoluted study of reading is a sensible description of how readers arrive at an understanding of novels, constructing the world implied by a text and "assembling" its meaning. Reading is presented as a purely intellectual, ideational affair. Not a word is said of the emotional component of a reader's response. For Iser fiction is a mode of communication. A novel is "a system of perspectives designed to transmit the individuality of the author's vision" (p. 35), and the reader participates "both in the production and the comprehension of the work's intention" (p. 23). The author's vision is a vision of the social and cultural norms of his time, which he may either "shore up" and affirm, or break down by making us experience their deficiencies. Iser is at his best in explicating the "time flow" of reading, the "wandering viewpoint" which the reader must adopt in the "continual interplay between modified expectations and transformed memories" (p. 111). What we experience while reading is a shifting sequence of points of view—the narrator's, the implied reader's, a particular character's—and a sequence of events that either confirm or disconfirm these points of view. We build up "images" of the characters and events, and of what they seem to mean, and then must correct them as new information is provided. Thus our initial image of Fielding's Squire Allworthy as "the perfect man" must be modified when Captain Blifil dupes him, and modified again when he sees through the appearances of Tom's behavior to his benevolent motives. What makes reading an active, constructive process is the fact that the text does not provide all the necessary links between points of view and the train of events. What it provides instead are "blanks," apparent inconsistencies that the reader must fill in or explain. To do so, driven as we are by the search for consistency, is both to construct the meanings and experience them. As we discover, for example, the deficiencies of the various points of view in Tom Jones, each of which represents a particular eighteenth-century view of human nature, we simultaneously construct one of the central meanings of the novel: that there is a "gulf between the rigid confines of principle and the endless fluidity of human experience" (p. 77). The significance of this meaning is whatever it reveals to the reader about himself: "The reader should see himself reflected in the characters, and so should come to a better

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

To see god in his beauty: avraham chalfi and the mystical quest for the evasive god

TL;DR: Chalfi's poetry contains some of the main themes of the mystical experience, namely, the attempt "to see God in his Beauty" and the quest to gain an intimate communion with the Divine.
Journal ArticleDOI

J. M. Coetzee's Foe and the embodiment of meaning

TL;DR: This article argued that the last chapter of J.M. Coetzee's Foe can be interpreted as a metafictional allegory of the reader's making sense of the novel.

The Reader of Milton's "Higher Argument" in Paradise Lost

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a Dedication Dedication and Acknowledgments for the work of this paper... and acknowledgment of the authors' work...
Book

Socratic and Platonic Political Philosophy: Practicing a Politics of Reading

TL;DR: Long's attentive readings of the Protagoras, Gorgias, Phaedo, Apology, and Phaedrus invite us to cultivate the habits of thinking and responding that mark the practices of both Socratic and Platonic politics as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a stylistic typology of narrative gaps: knowledge gapping in Flannery O’Connor’s fiction:

TL;DR: The authors examines the functions of narrative gaps in the creation and manipulation of knowledge in Flannery O'Connor's fiction and demonstrates the presence of an attenuated announced gap in O’Connor’s fiction in the use of the indefinite pronoun something.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Truth in Fiction: A Reexamination of Audiences

TL;DR: Some literary arguments, such as those about the fourth book of Gulliver's Travels, clarify and enrich the works around which they center, while others reveal a fundamental inadequacy in the way we talk about literature as discussed by the authors.