Illusion in literature

Illusion is the illustration of falsities1—which is kind of like dramatic irony, but the reader is unawares rather just than the character(s). It can be a dream, vision, or other device that misleads or confuses a character.2

Illusion may also refer to a reader’s sense of immersion, as Wolfgang Iser writes about in The Reading Process—A Phenomenological Approach.

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