The book is described Fiction Sets You Free, Russell A. Berman. Berman, whose aim is to demonstrate that literary fiction is inherently capitalist presupposes that literature, and therefore helps to create a capitalist mentality in the reader. The contrafactum with the words of the Gospel of John (8.32: “the truth shall make you free”), clearly puts us on track for a reading of capitalism as mystical Gnostic secret of human salvation, as a form of knowledge of the truths transcendent redemption that produce both earthly and spiritual, on the altar of the god Market (free, of course).[the market economy is] most definitely a precondition of artistic freedom”. The collection of happy moments that one can draw out of the review are worth reading in the original English: I think someone should tell this man that the fact that the Iliad and the Odyssey were sung by the Greek markets during the first millennium before Christ, we can not assume that the economy of classical Greece was capitalist. Or, wait, wait a minute, you might want to say that if the literature assumes a capitalist mentality in the reader, this means that any company that has created a literature worthy of the name must be considered a capitalist society. Ergo demonstrates the need possible, the priority of the will on reality. It’s doubly amazing!
although it should make us consider the fact that the Eco imbeciles incapable of writing. Belbo does say: “But we are not interested, is never creative works rendered, so that no manuscripts in publishing.” It may be true in 1988, but the fact remains that, twenty years later, not only manuscripts sent to publishers, and are published, it is highly unlikely that the hurricane hits us that the economic drag, because in the end the truth will not let them ruin your fiction of the omnipotence of the free market.