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E-grāmata: Russian Literature and Cognitive Science

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This volume applies the newest insights from cognitive psychology to the study of Russian literature. Chapters focus on writers and cultural figures from the Golden to the Internet Age including: Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Sologub, Bely, Akhmatova, Nabokov, Baranskaya, and contemporary online discourse.



Russian Literature and Cognitive Science applies the newest insights from cognitive psychology to the study of Russian literature. Chapters focus on writers and cultural figures from the Golden to the Internet Age including: Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Sologub, Bely, Akhmatova, Nabokov, Baranskaya, and contemporary online discourse. The authors draw on a wide array of cognitively-informed fields within psychology and related disciplines and approaches such as social psychology, visual processing, conceptual blending, cognitive narratology, the study of autism, cognitive approaches to creativity, the medical humanities, reader reception theory, cognitive anthropology, psychopathology, psychoanalysis, Theory of Mind, visual processing, embodied cognition, and predictive processing. This volume demonstrates how useful a tool cognitive science is for the analysis of literary texts.

Recenzijas

"In Russian Literature and Cognitive Science, Tom Dolack marshals old hands and new faces to show the many ways the new sciences of the mind can illuminate from unexpected angles the incomparable treasury of Russian literature from Pushkin to the present." -- Brian Boyd, University of Auckland Science (including cognitive science) tends to isolate, quantify, narrow down a problem and then generalize on it; the literary humanities has conventionally pursued the very different goals of local context, personal depth, and idiosyncrasy. Each type of knowledge has its own precision, its own dynamic. In this rich and strenuously multidisciplinary collection of essays, Tom Dolack would bring the two together. From Pushkin through evolutionary biology to autism in Nabokov, mass shooters as Underground Men, and metaphor in the interactive speech genres of todays online sites, the reader is urged to welcome as many different approaches to knowing as the brain can bear. Whether or not literary (or virtual) characters have mindsand the verdict on that is still outthe mix in this book of what can be cognitively measured and what cannot will challenge and delight even those who feel wholly at home in Russian literary worlds. -- Caryl Emerson, Princeton University "It seems only natural that the literary tradition of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, and Pushkin should invite interpretation using the most sophisticated current psychological research. But few of us who are not in Slavic studies are familiar with the breadth and variety of recent cognitive scientific work on Russian literature. With its diversity of approaches, and an accessible introduction mapping that diversity, this collection offers readers a way of entering into to the complex, cognitive world of this major literary tradition."

Papildus informācija

This volume applies the newest insights from cognitive psychology to the study of Russian literature. Chapters focus on writers and cultural figures from the Golden to the Internet Age including: Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Sologub, Bely, Akhmatova, Nabokov, Baranskaya, and contemporary online discourse.
Preface

Introduction Tom Dolack

Chapter 1: Pushkin's The Stationmaster: Morality Meets Sexual Selection
David Bethea

Chapter 2: Flow and Selfhood in Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina: A Case Study of
the Mowing Scene David S. Danaher

Chapter 3: Facial Imagery, Reader Visualization, and the Visual Ethics of War
and Peace Sarah B. Mohler

Chapter 4: A Multilevel Cognitive Approach to Pushkin Tom Dolack

Chapter 5: Staying Imperturbable in the Face of Fate: Alexander Pushkins
Gothic Stories Conveying the Code of Honor in the Face of the Supernatural
Ekaterina Chelpanova

Chapter 6: (Un)Reading and the Gappiness of Context: Towards a New
Cognitive Reception Theory Katherina B. Kokinova

Chapter 7: Re-Visioning Despair: The Medical Gaze in Sologubs The Petty
Demon Kelly Knickmeier Cummings

Chapter 8: Autism in Nabokovs The Defense Brett Cooke

Chapter 9: Provocation and Pre-Diction: Terrorist Realism as a Narrative Mode
in the Russian Imperiums Prose 1862-1914 (Particularly in Andrei Belys
Petersburg, 1913) Micha Mrugalski

Chapter 10: Mass Shooters as Underground Men of the 21st Century Irina Meier

Chapter 11: Russian Cognitive Approaches for Studying Genres of Contemporary
Electronic Communication: Interpreting Sincere Conversations in New Media
Anna Novikova and Julia Lerner

Chapter 12: Dream (Re)Interpretation: Metaphors and Story Schemas in Meaning
Creation Anna A. Lazareva

Chapter 13: Intersections between Language, Social Norms, and Individual
Cognition in Natalya Baranskayas A Week like Any Other Angelina Rubina

Chapter 14: Cognitive Aspects of Deixis and Semantic Poetics of Anna
Akhmatova and Joseph Brodsky Denis Akhapkin

About the Contributors
Tom Dolack is senior professor of the Practice of Russian at Wheaton College.