Literary Language and Cognitive Experience: How the Reading of English Literary Fiction Shapes Empathy, Theory of Mind, and Social Cognition

Authors

  • Dr. Chander Mohan Associate Professor, Head of the Department of English at GDC Majalta

Keywords:

cognitive poetics, empathy, Theory of Mind, literary fiction, English literature, social cognition, defamiliarisation, free indirect discourse

Abstract

This paper explores the intersection of literary language, cognition, and social understanding, examining the empirical evidence for the hypothesis that sustained engagement with English literary fiction cultivates empathy, enhances Theory of Mind (ToM) capacities, and reshapes social cognition more broadly. Synthesising findings from cognitive poetics, developmental psychology, and experimental aesthetics, the paper argues that the particular textual features of literary fiction  including deep point-of-view narration, affective free indirect discourse, moral ambiguity, and defamiliarisation  create distinctive cognitive demands that exercise and refine the mental capacities underlying interpersonal understanding. The paper also addresses methodological objections to this claim, considers the role of genre and text difficulty, and discusses implications for reading pedagogy and the place of literary education in cognitive and social development.

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References

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Published

2026-06-29

How to Cite

Dr. Chander Mohan. (2026). Literary Language and Cognitive Experience: How the Reading of English Literary Fiction Shapes Empathy, Theory of Mind, and Social Cognition. Journal of International Islamic Law, Human Right and Public Policy, 4(1), 1416–1420. Retrieved from https://jishup.org/index.php/ojs/article/view/316

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