Thinking with Literature
Towards a Cognitive Criticism
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 10 May 2018
- ISBN 9780198824640
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages218 pages
- Size 196x129x11 mm
- Weight 240 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Thinking with Literature offers a succinct introduction to a cognitive literary criticsm. Broad in scope but focusing on a particular cluster of approaches, it aims to induce a change of perspective in the reader.
MoreLong description:
To speak of 'thinking with literature' is to make the assumption that literature (in the broadest sense) is neither a side-show nor a side-issue in human cultures: it belongs to the spectrum of imaginative modes that includes both philosophical and scientific thought. Whether one regards it as a practice or as an archive, literature is highly pervasive, robust, enduring, and pregnant with values. Thinking with Literature argues that what it affords above all is a way of thinking, whether for writer, reader, or critic. Literature constitutes one of the prime instruments of cultural improvisation; it is the embodiment of a powerful, inventive, and ever-changing cognitive agency. As such, it invites a cognitive mode of criticism, one which asserts the priority of the individual literary work as a unique product of human cognition. In this book, discussions of topics, arguments, and hypotheses from the cognitive sciences, philosophy, and the theory of communication are woven into the fabric of a critical analysis which insists on the value of close reading: a poem by Yeats, a scene from Shakespeare, novels by Mme de Lafayette, Conrad, Frantzen, stories from Winnie-the-Pooh, and many others appear here on their own terms, with their own cognitive energies. Written in an accessible style, Thinking with Literature speaks both to mainstream readers of literature and to specialists in cognitive studies.
Terence Cave, in Thinking with Literature ... goes inside our minds to map out a new "cognitive approach to literary studies".
Table of Contents:
Preface
Openings
Cognitive conversations
The balloon, the shed, and the bees
Literary affordances: culture as second nature
The balloon of the mind: literary imaginations
Cognitive figures
Cognitive mimesis: the cliff and the ballroom
The posture of reading: Joseph Conrad's Lord Jim
Literary values in a cognitive perspective
A virtual manifesto for cognitive literary studies