Kendall Walton’s Mimesis as Make-Believe (1990) offers a complementary analytic framework: fictions are props in games of make-believe. When we read “the monster lurks,” we imagine that a proposition is true in the fictional world. Imagination here is rule-governed, social, and quasi-perceptual. Walton dissolves the classic binary of real vs. unreal, replacing it with degrees of participation in generated worlds.
Where Coleridge emphasizes imagination as synthesis , Bachelard emphasizes eruption . Yet both agree: imagination precedes and shapes reflective thought. 4. Hermeneutic Turn: Ricoeur’s Poetics of Metaphor and Narrative Paul Ricoeur synthesizes Romantic and phenomenological threads into a linguistic-hermeneutic framework. In The Rule of Metaphor (1975) and Time and Narrative (1983–85), he argues that imagination is the capacity to see as —to redescribe reality under novel categories.
For Ricoeur, a live metaphor does not simply replace a literal term; it creates a semantic impertinence that forces us to restructure semantic fields. “Time is a beggar” (Rilke) is not a substitution but a new predication. Imagination is the operation of grasping this new resemblance in the absence of literal similarity.
Imagination operates narratively through employment —the synthesis of heterogeneous events (causes, accidents, actions) into a unified plot. Employment is an imaginative act that transforms chronos (mere sequence) into kairos (significant time). When we read a novel, we do not passively receive a sequence; we imaginatively trace the configurational act of the author.
This paper advances two core theses: (1) Imagination is , not decorative: it generates the very textures of experience. (2) Its poetic operation follows discernible logics—metaphor, narrative emplotment, and image-schema—that can be analyzed formally.
Of Imagination | Poetics
Kendall Walton’s Mimesis as Make-Believe (1990) offers a complementary analytic framework: fictions are props in games of make-believe. When we read “the monster lurks,” we imagine that a proposition is true in the fictional world. Imagination here is rule-governed, social, and quasi-perceptual. Walton dissolves the classic binary of real vs. unreal, replacing it with degrees of participation in generated worlds.
Where Coleridge emphasizes imagination as synthesis , Bachelard emphasizes eruption . Yet both agree: imagination precedes and shapes reflective thought. 4. Hermeneutic Turn: Ricoeur’s Poetics of Metaphor and Narrative Paul Ricoeur synthesizes Romantic and phenomenological threads into a linguistic-hermeneutic framework. In The Rule of Metaphor (1975) and Time and Narrative (1983–85), he argues that imagination is the capacity to see as —to redescribe reality under novel categories. poetics of imagination
For Ricoeur, a live metaphor does not simply replace a literal term; it creates a semantic impertinence that forces us to restructure semantic fields. “Time is a beggar” (Rilke) is not a substitution but a new predication. Imagination is the operation of grasping this new resemblance in the absence of literal similarity. Kendall Walton’s Mimesis as Make-Believe (1990) offers a
Imagination operates narratively through employment —the synthesis of heterogeneous events (causes, accidents, actions) into a unified plot. Employment is an imaginative act that transforms chronos (mere sequence) into kairos (significant time). When we read a novel, we do not passively receive a sequence; we imaginatively trace the configurational act of the author. Walton dissolves the classic binary of real vs
This paper advances two core theses: (1) Imagination is , not decorative: it generates the very textures of experience. (2) Its poetic operation follows discernible logics—metaphor, narrative emplotment, and image-schema—that can be analyzed formally.