The Nature and Aim of Fiction

E316164

The Nature and Aim of Fiction is an influential essay by Flannery O’Connor that explores what fiction is, how it works, and what purposes it serves in the writer’s and reader’s experience.

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The Nature and Aim of Fiction canonical 2

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Statements (41)

Predicate Object
instanceOf essay
literary criticism essay
author Flannery O'Connor
surface form: Flannery O’Connor
collectionType essay collection
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
discusses moral dimension of fiction
nature of fictional narrative
reader’s engagement with fictional characters
relationship between fiction and reality
role of concrete detail in fiction
role of imagination in fiction
techniques of fiction writing
writer’s responsibility to the work
genre literary theory
nonfiction
hasNotableIdea fiction is experienced rather than simply understood
fiction reveals deeper truth through concrete detail
fiction should be faithful to the mystery of existence
good fiction resists abstraction and generalization
hasPerspectiveOf Catholic writer
Southern American writer
includedIn Mystery and Manners
influenced creative writing pedagogy
literary criticism on fiction
intendedAudience general readers of fiction
students of literature
writers
language English
literaryMovementContext Catholic literary revival
surface form: American Catholic literature

Southern Gothic
mainTopic craft of fiction
fiction
purpose of fiction
reader’s experience of fiction
writer’s experience of fiction
nonfictionSubject aesthetics of fiction
fiction writing
literature
philosophy of art
publicationForm print
timePeriod 20th century

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Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Mystery and Manners hasPart The Nature and Aim of Fiction
Total Effect and the Eighth Grade relatedWork The Nature and Aim of Fiction