Contents // Preface...11 // I. Actual-Counterfŕctual-Fictional // Fictionality and Information...19 // Göran Rossholm // A Note on the Difficulty of Creating Fictional Characters...32 // Fredrik Stjemberg // How Do I Know That I am not a Fictional Character? ...42 // Alberto Voltolini // ?. Fictional Worlds // Prague School Poetics - a Path to Fictional Worlds...59 // Lubomír Doležel // Fictional Worlds between Philosophy, Semiotics, // and Linguistics...1...63 // Bohumil Fort // Between History and Fiction: On the Possibilities of Alternative // History... 74 // Ondrej Sládek // Who Is Who in the Fictional World...89 // Petr Kottitko // [9] // III. Language in Fictional Discourse // Frege on Fiction... // Marián Zouhar // Empty Names, Fictional Characters, and Existence Eros Corazza // Vacuous Sentences... // Paolo Leonardi // 103 // 121 // 141 // IV. Fictional! ty-Narra ti vi ty-Literariness // Narrative, Fiction, Imagination... // James Hamilton // The Role of Fictionality in Literature Anders Pettersson // Fictionality as Density. Martin Pokorný // The Theory of Fictional Worlds from the Perspective of Structural Analysis... // Tomáš Koblížek // 157 // 184 // 201 // 213 // V. Imagined-Conceived-Fictional // The Real and the Imaginary in the Soldier’s Experience...229 // Josep E. Corbi // Hole in the Ground There Lived a Hobbit; or, a Few Comments // on Fictional Space of Narrative and Mental Imagery...251 // Alice Jedlicková // Stoic Fictions: The Prehistory
of Analysis...259 // Karel Thein // On the Contributors...281 // Index // [10]