from Part III - Practical Perspectives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 June 2019
The study of literary deception – which the US Library of Congress calls “literary forgeries and mystifications” in its catalog of subject headings – has plenty of attractions. We can treat the thief or the faker as an embodiment of the mythological trickster figure wreaking havoc on a staid establishment, or the crafty pícaro mischievously showing up his betters. Literary malefactors are adored for their chutzpah in embarrassing the self-important and revealing they are gullible fools and knaves.
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