Fr. 130.00

Contracts of Fiction - Cognition, Culture, Community

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Zusatztext The Contracts of Fiction asks why we invest so much energy producing, consuming, and sharing fictions despite their evident lack of truth value. Deftly recruiting concepts from the biological and cognitive sciences to the aid of literary theory, Ellen Spolsky produces the most compelling synthesis to date of cognitive, evolutionary, and literary understandings of the human imagination. Informationen zum Autor Ellen Spolsky is Professor of English Emeritus at Bar-Ilan University in Israel. Her previous books include Word vs. Image: Cognitive Hunger in Shakespeare's England (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007) and Gaps in Nature: Literary Interpretation and the Modular Mind (SUNY Press, 1993). Klappentext The Contracts of Fiction reconnects our fictional worlds to the rest of our lives. Countering the contemporary tendency to dismiss works of imagination as enjoyable but epistemologically inert, the book considers how various kinds of fictions construct, guide, and challenge institutional relationships within social groups. The contracts of fiction, like the contracts of language, law, kinship, and money, describe the rules by which members of a group toggle between tokens and types, between their material surroundings - the stuff of daily life - and the abstractions that give it value. Rethinking some familiar literary concepts such as genre and style from the perspective of recent work in the biological, cognitive, and brain sciences, the book displays how fictions engage bodies and minds in ways that help societies balance continuity and adaptability. Being part of a community means sharing the ways its members use stories, pictures, plays and movies, poems and songs, icons and relics, to generate usable knowledge about the people, objects, beliefs and values in their environment. Exposing the underlying structural and processing homologies among works of imagination and life processes such as metabolism and memory, Ellen Spolsky demonstrates the seamless connection of life to art by revealing the surprising dependence of both on disorder, imbalance, and uncertainty. In early modern London, for example, reformed religion, expanding trade, and changed demographics made the obsolescent courts a source of serious inequities. Just at that time, however, a flood of wildly popular revenge tragedies, such as Hamlet, by their very form, by their outrageous theatrical grotesques, were shouting the need for change in the justice system. A sustained discussion of the genre illustrates how biological homeostasis underpins the social balance that we maintain with difficulty, and how disorder itself incubates new understanding. Zusammenfassung The Contracts of Fiction invites readers to consider the advantages of describing fictions as governed by a set of social contracts, teaching us how to think about the stuff of daily life, animate and inanimate, as abstractions. Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of Contents Preface: An Invitation Chapter 1: Embodiment and its Entailments Chapter 2: Lyrics and their Frames Chapter 3: Genre Change and Narrative Recovery (Maybe) Chapter 4: Intelligence on a Communal Scale: An Enriched Theory of Distributed Cognition Chapter 5: Distributed Misunderstanding Chapter 6: Affording Justice through sinderesis: an early modern embodiment theory Chapter 7: Balance and Imbalance Chapter 8: The Skepticism of Grotesques: 'Between the Known and the Unknown' Chapter 9: Detach and Reuse Notes References Index ...

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.