Fr. 240.00

Embodied Cognition and Shakespeare''s Theatre - The Early Modern Body-Mind

English · Hardback

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Description

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This collection considers issues that have emerged in Early Modern Studies in the past fifteen years relating to understandings of mind and body in Shakespeare's world. The essays examine Shakespeare's theatre in terms of an early modern 'body-mind,' covering histories of cognition, studies of early modern stage practices, textual studies, and historical phenomenology, as well as new cultural histories. Shakespeare and his contemporaries are understood in terms of the interrelation between bodily parts and cognitive processes, based on early modern beliefs in the embodiment of cognition.


List of contents

Introduction: Re-cognising the Body-Mind in Shakespeare’s Theatre Laurie Johnson, John Sutton, and Evelyn Tribble 1. Proteus Agonistes: Shakespeare, Bacon, and the "Torture" of Nature David Hawkes 2. Plays, Playing, and Make-believe: Thinking and Feeling in Shakespearean Drama Ros King 3. Warmth and Affection in 1 Henry IV: Why No One Likes Prince Hal Emma Firestone First Link: Subjectivity and the Mind-Body: Extending the Self on the Renaissance Stage Garrett A. Sullivan, Jr. 4. "Some Fury Pricks Me On": Satanic Thinking in Thomas Heywood’s A Woman Killed with Kindness Mary Floyd-Wilson 5. Mental Bodies in Much Ado About Nothing James A. Knapp Second Link: The Unbearable Permeability of Bodies and Minds Michael Schoenfeldt 6. "Make Me Not Sighted Like the Basilisk": Vision and Contagion in The Winter’s Tale Darryl Chalk 7. Singularity in The Winter’s Tale Hardin Aasand Third Link: Seeing the Spider: Cognitive Ecologies in The Winter’s Tale Gail Kern Paster 8. "There’s magic in the web of it": Skin, Mind, and Webs of Touch in Othello Jennifer Rae McDermott 9. Coriolanus’s Blush Tiffany Hoffman Fourth Link: The Play of Time in Cognition Katherine Rowe 10. Altered States: Hamlet and Early Modern Head Trauma Lianne Habinek 11. Cogito Ergo Theatrum: Redistributing Cognition on the Early Modern Stage Laurie Johnson 12. The Belly-Mind Relationship in Early Modern Culture: Digestion, Ventriloquism, and the Second Brain Jan Purnis Postscriptum David Hillman and Carla Mazzio

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