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Monika Fludernik’s Toward a Natural Narratology (1996) develops a detailed historical account of how the textual structures of experientiality identified in the theoretical framework have developed in English fiction since the 17th century. According to Fludernik’s account, the English novel gets progressively better at matching the cognitive schemata underlying such experientiality. The present article argues, however, that such an understanding of the historical dimension of experientiality is an instance of “the curse of realism,” that is, of discussing early modern texts in light of the expectations established by 19th-century realism. It proposes an alternative model for engaging with the historical dimension of cognitive narratology, which is rooted in embodied cognition and predictive processing.
June 2018: Karin Kukkonen is Associate Professor in Comparative Literature at the University of Oslo. Her most recent project investigates how stylistic and narrative changes in 18th-century prose writing in England and France contributed to the immersive, embodied qualities of the novel. She has published widely on cognitive and transmedial narratology, with articles in journals like Style, Paragraph, Anglia, Orbis Litterarum, and Substance, as well as the monographs Contemporary Comics Storytelling (2013) and A Prehistory of Cognitive Poetics: Neoclassicism and the Novel (2017).