Psychology and Realism in Mimesis

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In a literary piece, the reenactment of a certain type of reality is directly assimilated by the mimetic criticism of readers, concerning their experiences in the real world, the present world and the literary world. Various postmodernist writers employ this technique in their writings for the purpose of engaging and interacting their readers with the realist ideas they present throughout their work. Reality is presented in different ways so that it essentially influences the reader’s perspective concerning the interpretation an author has about the real world. For this reason, I will follow Theo D’haen and argue that Nabokov and Calvino synthesize the “real” reality of Realism and the “psychological” reality of Modernism to redefine a mimetic reality for their readers, by examining the position of Theo D’haen, the novels: Lolita and In a Winters Night, A Traveler and Gunter Bebauer’s stance on Mimesis.
Theo D’haen, a professor at the University of Leuven, synthesizes that a postmodernist writer is one who uses a “combination of any number of techniques that were seen as innovative and perhaps even transgressive, especially with regard to all forms of referentiality, be it reference to some “real” reality as in realism or to a “psychological” reality as in modernism”(Theo D’haen 272). Following this explanation, the self-reflectiveness, interdependency, parody and mimetic reality that readers are exposed to when reading a metafictional piece, branches into the different interpretations presented by D’haen: a ‘real’ reality and a ‘psychological’ reality. The act of judging any work of art in relation to its representation of reality is a parallel to the reader’s assimilation of a mimetic reality, acknowledged by a physiological th...

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...reality for their readers. This can be expressed through Theo D’haen’s work, Vladimir Nabokov and Italo Calvino’s novels; Lolita and If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler and through Gunter Bebauer’s standpoint on Mimesis. The portrayal of a certain truth and the effect it has on the audience is directly related to how the author opts for the mimetic assimilation of their stance on reality. There are various qualities attributed to mimesis that authors use to influence the way their readers self-consciously absorb a psychological reality. By disregarding the use of artificial facts throughout their stories, authors sketch a type of verisimilitude to prevail their idea of the real world to their readers. Therefore, the readers have a first person view on how the author presents a mimetic reality that is eventually assimilated in a psychological and realist way.

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