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E-grāmata: Repetition and Creation: Poetics of Autotextuality

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This book advances the notion of autotextuality, the dialogue between works in an author’s oeuvre, and the ways in which new texts are created in self-repetition through the tracing and revisiting of past texts and the subsequent uncovering of undisclosed meanings, unexhausted constructive principles, and alternative versions.

Kolarov draws on cognitive models, such as dual coding theory and conceptual blending, to substantiate a theory of autotextuality and build on previous work on self-repetition and difference to highlight the notion of “discursive desire,” in which new meanings are generated through repetition, and its distinct relationship to creativity. Drawing on analyses of well-established works in Bulgarian as well as the established oeuvres of such authors as Gogol, Dostoevsky, Kafka, and Baudelaire, the volume explores key themes in autotextuality such as the functions of creative memory, the connections between word and image, and the hermeneutic relationships and steps of transformation between texts. 

This innovative work addresses topical questions of importance in literary theory today and will be of interest to students and scholars in literary studies and related areas of study within such fields as cognitive science, quantum mechanics, and psychology.



This book advances the notion of autotextuality, the dialogue between works in an author’s oeuvre, and the ways in which new texts are created in self-repetition through the tracing and revisiting of past texts and the subsequent uncovering of undisclosed meanings, unexhausted constructive principles, and alternative versions.
CONTENTS

Introduction

Part I

Main Concepts

1. A Work and uvre: Intra/Intertextuality

2. Discursive Desire: Poetics of Repetitiveness

3. Hesitation: A Theoretical Digression

Part II

Generative Models

4. The Work of the Matrix

5. Frames, Scenarios, Networks

6. The Initiation Work

7. Self-polemic

8. Self-parody

Part III

Creative Memory

9. Memory Versus Machine

10. The Virtual Figure

11. Word or Image: The Forms of Memory

Part IV

Hermeneutic Autotextuality

12. The Amplifier Work

13. The Explicator Work

14. The Transmodal Idea

Afterword

Index

Afterword
Radosvet Kolarov is Associate Professor at the Institute for Literature at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria.