Literary fiction and social science. Two partially overlapping magisteria

Abstract

Literary fiction and social science, despite the fact that they comprise two methodologically autonomous cultures, are nonetheless creatively interfere with each other. This paper explores the multiple points of contact between literature and social science and tracks the influences that literary fiction has had on social-scientific knowledge. Nine cases of ideas originally developed in literary sphere and then taken over by various social sciences and integrated into their conceptual vocabularies form the analytic material of this study. The main argument defended in this paper is that literary fiction is a great source of ideas that can inspire theory construction in social sciences. The corpus of literary texts which make up the textual universe of literature contains many embryonically foreshadowed concepts and proto-theories that can be worked out by social sciences into full-blown scientific conceptualizations. Literary tradition is also the depository of punctual propositions that can be distilled from fiction and translated into empirically testable hypotheses. This quality of literary fiction, of providing ‘Prêt-à-tester’ propositions, makes it a predilect source of inspiration for social science theorizing.

Authors and Affiliations

Mihai Stelian Rusu

Keywords

Related Articles

Motives in social organization

Editor’s introduction to the Themed Issue

An anthropological approach to voluntarily single motherhood in Barcelona

This article is based on the research I did for my doctoral thesis about voluntarily single motherhood in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain). It is an anthropological approach to the appearance and the development of voluntari...

The representation of older people playing a digital game in the short film ‘Pony Place’: A semiotic and narratological analysis

This article focuses on Dutch older adults’ use of digital devices in general, and digital games in particular, from an intergenerational perspective. We first present some facts related to provide insight into how Dutch...

Social closure and social policy The debates on social opening within benefit societies in the advent of national health insurance

Social solidarity is based on categories of belonging; trade unions rely on their members’ selfunderstanding as trade fellows and nation states on the ‘imagined’ (Anderson 2006 [1983]) common identity of their population...

Social closure and discriminatory practices related to the Roma minority in the Czech Republic through the perspective of national and European institutions

While differentiating among notions of social exclusion, social closure and bridging social capital, the article analyses the evolution of cultural and social borders between the Czech majority on the one hand and the Ro...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP142919
  • DOI -
  • Views 90
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Mihai Stelian Rusu (2014). Literary fiction and social science. Two partially overlapping magisteria. Journal of Comparative Research in Anthropology and Sociology, 5(2), 133-152. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-142919