"Who Is He to Speak of My Sorrow?"

Poetics Today 41 (2):223-41 (2020)
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Abstract

This article suggests that comparative literature scholars may benefit from the awareness that different communities around the world subscribe to different models of mind and that works of fiction can thus be fruitfully analyzed in relation to those local ideologies of mind. Taking as her starting point the “opacity of mind” doctrine, the author compares cultural practices originating in communities in which people think but do not talk publicly about others’ internal states, to those originating in communities in which people both think and talk about them, indeed, in which public speculation about other people’s intentions is (mostly) rewarded.

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Lisa Zunshine
University of Kentucky

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References found in this work

Ethical life: its natural and social histories.Webb Keane - 2015 - Princeton {New Jersey]: Princeton University Press.
Further Reflections on Reading Other Minds.Alessandro Duranti - 2008 - Anthropological Quarterly 81 (2):483-494.

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