In placing contemporary approaches to Realism within the context of the philosophy of Jacques Rancière, this essay responds to a critique of Realist writings and offers an understanding that goes beyond Realism as it originated in the 19th century. Citing examples by the Turkish Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk and the Canadian writer Margaret Atwood, the essay argues that these two writers offer complementary perspectives on how realistic modes of representation can contribute to a viable contemporary aesthetics of Realist literature. It points to a need to overcome the primacy of the visual and thus highlights vocality as an additional component in a contemporary theory of realism. It argues that this impulse to represent other voices, to imita...