Abstract
Recent philosophical attention to fiction has focused on imaginative resistance, especially with respect to moral matters, and has concluded that moral attitudes are distinctively hard to shift, even in imagination. However, we also need to explain 'disparate response': readers' ability and willingness to alter their emotional, moral and other evaluative responses from those they would have to the same situation in real life. I argue that a unified explanation of both imaginative resistance and disparate response needs to appeal to perspectives. Trying on a perspective involves more than imagining an experience or the truth of a set of propositions: it requires actually structuring one's intuitive thinking in the relevant way. A perspectival account better comports with empirical evidence of malleability in readers' responses to both fiction and non-fiction, and more accurately predicts when imaginative resistance and accommodation actually arise.