Is there truth in fiction? Lessons from readers’ responses to dementia fiction
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
BMJ Publishing Group
Fecha
2024-12-04Referencia bibliográfica
Luega, J. et. al. Medical Humanities Published Online First: 04 Dec 2024. [https://doi.org/10.1136/medhum-2024-012976]
Patrocinador
Arts and Humanities Research Council, UK, grant number AH/S001476/1Resumen
This paper addresses the question ’is there truth
in fiction?’, by synthesising a range of disciplinary
approaches to the issue, as well as drawing on empirical
research carried out with readers of fiction about
dementia (hereafter, dementia fiction). We argue that
fiction—perhaps because of its fictional status and
apparatus—invites readers to consider its truth value,
to explore the possibilities of human experience and
interrogate issues relative to their subjective experience,
community or society. The findings have significant
implications for the Medical Humanities’ use of fictional
texts to explore lived medical conditions and experiences,
as well as claims made about the potential for fiction
to affect real-world
understandings, awareness and
empathy around the conditions depicted. We show that
the techniques used in fictional language may be artifice,
but they simulate a truth that corresponds with reality.