Fr. 142.00

Text in the Natural World - Topics in the Evolutionary Theory of Literature

English · Hardback

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Description

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The study of literature has expanded to include an evolutionary perspective. Its premise is that the literary text and literature as an overarching institution came into existence as a product of the same evolutionary process that gave rise to the human species. In this view, literature is an evolutionary adaptation that functions as any other adaptation does, as a means of enhancing survivability and also promoting benefits for the individual and society. Text in the Natural World is an introduction to the theory and a survey of topics pertinent to the evolutionary view of literature. After a polemical, prefatory chapter and an overview of the pertinent aspects of evolutionary theory itself, the book examines integral building blocks of literature and literary expression as effects of evolutionary development. This includes chapters on moral sense, symbolic thought, literary aesthetics in general, literary ontology, the broad topic of form, function and device in literature, a last theoretical chapter on narrative, and a chapter on literary themes. The concluding chapter builds on the preceding one as an illustration of evolutionary thematic study in practice, in a study of the fauna in the fiction of Maupassant. This text is designed to be of interest to those who read and think about things literary, as well as to those who have interest in the extension of Darwin's great idea across the horizon of human culture. It tries to bridge the gulf that has separated the humanities from the sciences, and would be a helpful text for courses taught in both literary theory and interdisciplinary approaches to literature and philosophy.

List of contents

Acknowledgments - Polemical Introduction - The Evolving Theory - Moral Sense, Amoral World - Symbolic Thought - Evolutionary Aesthetics - Ontology - Form, Function and Device - Narrative - Thematics - Thematic Study: The Fauna in Maupassant's Fiction, or A Page from Darwin's Book - Bibliography - Appendix.

About the author










Laurence A. Gregorio is Professor of French Language and Literature at Gettysburg College since 1983. He has published in the areas of evolutionary theory of literature and French literature of the seventeenth century. He teaches courses in French, the history of ideas in French literature, and Darwin across the liberal arts.

Product details

Authors Laurence A Gregorio, Laurence A. Gregorio
Publisher Peter Lang
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.08.2017
 
EAN 9781433137716
ISBN 978-1-4331-3771-6
No. of pages 222
Dimensions 150 mm x 17 mm x 225 mm
Weight 430 g
Series Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature
Studies on Themes and Motifs in Literature
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > English linguistics / literary studies

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