Psychology and Literature in the Eighteenth Century
Author | : Christopher Fox |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 400 |
Release | : 1987 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : Christopher Fox |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 400 |
Release | : 1987 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Natalie M. Phillips |
Publisher | : JHU Press |
Total Pages | : 303 |
Release | : 2016-09-13 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 1421420120 |
Literary Attention: An fMRI Study of Reading Jane Austen
Author | : Julie Park |
Publisher | : Stanford University Press |
Total Pages | : 308 |
Release | : 2010 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0804756961 |
The Self and It makes a fresh and bold intervention in histories and theories of the rise of the novel by arguing that the material objects proliferating in eighteenth-century England's consumer markets worked in conjunction with the novel as vital tools for fashioning the modern self.
Author | : Ann Jessie van Sant |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 168 |
Release | : 2004-05-20 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780521604581 |
This study of sensibility in the eighteenth-century English novel discusses literary representations of suffering and responses to it in the social and scientific context of the period. The reader of novels shares with more scientific observers the activity of gazing on suffering, leading Ann Van Sant to explore the coincidence between the rhetoric of pathos and scientific presentation as they were applied to repentant prostitutes and children of the vagrant and criminal poor. The book goes on to explore the novel's location of psychological responses to suffering in physical forms. Van Sant invokes eighteenth-century debates about the relative status of sight and touch in epistemology and psychology, as a context for discussing the 'man of feeling' (notably in Sterne's A Sentimental Journey) - a spectator who registers his sensibility by physical means.
Author | : I. Csengei |
Publisher | : Palgrave Macmillan |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2011-12-13 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780230308442 |
What makes it possible for self-interest, cruelty and violence to become part of the benevolent, compassionate ideology of eighteenth-century sensibility? This book explores forms of emotional response, including sympathy, tears, swoons and melancholia through a range of eighteenth-century literary, philosophical and scientific texts.
Author | : Karin Kukkonen |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press |
Total Pages | : 273 |
Release | : 2019-01-16 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0190913053 |
When the novel broke into cultural prominence in the eighteenth century, it became notorious for the gripping, immersive style of its narratives. In this book, Karin Kukkonen explores this phenomenon through the embodied style in Eliza Haywood's flamboyant amatory fiction, Charlotte Lennox's work as a cultural broker between Britain and France, Sarah Fielding's experimental novels, and Frances Burney's practice of life-writing and fiction-writing. Four female authors who are often written out of the history of the genre are here foregrounded in a critical account that emphasizes the importance of engaging readers' minds and bodies, and which invites us to revisit our understanding of the rise of the modern novel. Kukkonen's innovative theoretical approach is based on the approach of 4E cognition, which views thinking as profoundly embodied and embedded in social and material contexts, extending into technologies and material devices (such as a pen), and enactive in the inherent links between perceiving the world and moving around in it. 4E Cognition and Eighteenth-Century Fiction investigates the eighteenth-century novel through each of these trajectories and shows how language explores its embodied dimension by increasing the descriptions of inner perception, or the bodily gestures around spoken dialogue. The embodied dimension is then related to the media ecologies of letter-writing, book learning, and theatricality. As the novel feeds off and into these social and material contexts, it comes into its own as a lifeworld technology that might not answer to standards of nineteenth-century realism but that feels 'real' because it is integrated into the lifeworld and embodied experiences. 4E cognition answers one of the central challenges to cognitive literary studies: how to integrate historical and cultural contexts into cognitive approaches.
Author | : Matthew Bell |
Publisher | : Cambridge University Press |
Total Pages | : 332 |
Release | : 2005-07-07 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9780521846264 |
An analysis of psychological thought as expressed in German literature of the eighteenth century.
Author | : Ruth Mack |
Publisher | : Stanford University Press |
Total Pages | : 241 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0804759111 |
Literary Historicity explores how eighteenth-century British writers considered the past as an aspect of experience. Mack moves between close examinations of literature, historiography, and recent philosophical writing on history, offering a new view of eighteenth-century philosophies of history in Britain. Such philosophies, she argues, could be important literarily without being focused, as has been assumed, on questions of fact and fiction. Eighteenth-century writerslike many twentieth-century philosophersoften used literary form not in order to exhibit a work's fictional status but in order to consider what the relation between the past and present might be. Literary Historicity portrays a British Enlightenment that both embraces the possibility of historical experience and interrogates the terms for such experience, one deeply engaged with historical consciousness not as an inevitability of the modern world, but as something to be understood within it.
Author | : |
Publisher | : BRILL |
Total Pages | : 251 |
Release | : 2017-11-06 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 9004349367 |
This volume highlights the connections that link both literary discourse and the discourse about literature to the conceptual or representational frameworks, practices, and cognitive results (the ‘truths’) of disciplines such as psychology, medicine, epistemology, anthropology, cartography, chemistry, and rhetoric. Literature and the sciences, embedded as they are in specific historical circumstances, thus emerge as fields of inquiry and representation which share a number of assumptions and are determined or constructed by several modes of cross-fertilization. The range of authors examined includes Richard Brome, Margaret Cavendish, Aphra Behn, Shaftesbury, Defoe, Swift, Richardson and Smollett, while emphasis is placed on how authors of literature regard the practices, practitioners and findings of science, as well as on how ‘mimesis’ intersects with scientific discourse. Contributors are Bernhard Klein, Daniel Essig García, George Rousseau, Jorge Bastos da Silva, Kate De Rycker, Maria Avxentevskaya, Miguel Ramalhete Gomes, Mihaela Irimia, Richard Nate, and Wojciech Nowicki.
Author | : Terry Castle Professor of English Stanford University |
Publisher | : Oxford University Press, USA |
Total Pages | : 294 |
Release | : 1995-03-24 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 0198024274 |
A collection of the author's essays on the history and development of female identity from the 18th to the early 20th centuries. Throughout the book are woven themes which are constant in Castle's work: fantasy, hallucination, travesty, transgression and sexual ambiguity.