Cognitive Literary Studies

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B01=Isabel Jaén
B01=Julien Jacques Simon
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780292754423
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jun 2012
  • Publisher: University of Texas Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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In the first decade of the twenty-first century, our understanding of the cognition of literature was transformed by scientific discoveries, such as the mirror neuron system and its role in empathy. Addressing questions such as why we care so deeply about fictional characters, what brain activities are sparked when we read literature, and how literary works and scholarship can inform the cognitive sciences, this book surveys the exciting recent developments in the field of cognitive literary studies and includes contributions from leading scholars in both the humanities and the sciences.

Beginning with an overview of the evolution of literary studies, the editors trace the recent shift from poststructuralism and its relativism to a growing interdisciplinary interest in the empirical realm of neuroscience. In illuminating essays that examine the cognitive processes at work when we experience fictional worlds, with findings on the brain's creativity sites, this collection also explores the impact of literature on self and society, ending with a discussion on the present and future of the psychology of fiction. Contributors include Literature and the Brain author Norman N. Holland, on the neuroscience of metafiction reflected in Don Quixote; clinical psychologist Aaron Mishara on the neurology of self in the hypnagogic (between waking and sleeping) state and its manifestations in Kafka's stories; and literary scholar Brad Sullivan's exploration of Romantic poetry as a didactic tool, applying David Hartley's eighteenth-century theories of sensory experience.

Isabel JaÉn is Assistant Professor of Spanish at Portland State University. Julien Jacques Simon is Associate Professor of Spanish and French at Indiana University East. They are executive members of the Modern Language Association Cognitive Approaches to Literature discussion group and cofounded the Literary Theory, Cognition, and the Brain working group at Yale University.