Feeling-Thinking or Embodied Cognition in the Poetry of Rozalie Hirs and Anne Carson

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A01=Helena Van Praet
Author_Helena Van Praet
Category=DSA
Category=DSC
Category=DSM
Category=JMR
cog sci
cognitive theory
cogsci
comp lit
discursive cues
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminist cognitive narratology
formal
forthcoming
metalepsis
minor literature
networked configurations
new materialism
philosophy
poetry
psychology
science
screen thinking
sensory-material
word streams

Product details

  • ISBN 9798216396369
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A stimulating cross-disciplinary study of how poetry taps into an embodied cognition at its various levels of signification.

Feeling-Thinking or Embodied Cognition in the Poetry of Rozalie Hirs and Anne Carson asks: How can we feel-think in poetry and what are the effects of this embodied cognition for the resulting poetic epistemology? Combining a new materialist approach with insights from psychology, philosophy, and cognitive science, Helena Van Praet argues that such poetry is not only about felt knowledge but that it also invites readers to feel-think on a formal, sensory-material, and discursive level.

Using a comparative corpus focused on the contemporary writing of Dutch poet Rozalie Hirs and Canadian poet Anne Carson, this study uses experimental strategies such as situated conceptualizations, word streams, poetic metalepsis, networked configurations, screen thinking, and discursive cues to explore how knowledge and meaning are bodily mediated in poetry. It demonstrates that meaning is not just propositional but rather something that you do with your entire body and that poetry is the prime genre to show such an embodied cognition at work.

While earlier accounts tend to be limited to the physicality of the mind or mainly focus on either feeling or thinking, this book develops a full-bodied theory of embodied cognition in poetry. Through close readings, Feeling-Thinking shows how poetry can offer us alternative conceptions of knowledge that transcend purely rational accounts, inviting us to find joy in such cognitive creation.

Helena Van Praet is an FWO Junior Postdoctoral Fellow in Dutch and Comparative Literature at Ghent University, Belgium, and co-editor of Anne Carson and the Unknown (forthcoming). Her work has been published in journals such as Textual Practice and Poetics Today.

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