The Literary Animal: Evolution and the Nature of Narrative: Rethinking Theory
Editat de Jonathan Gottschall, David Sloan Wilson Cuvânt înainte de E. O. Wilson, Frederick Crewsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 dec 2005
In recent years, articles in major periodicals from the New York Times Magazine to the Times Literary Supplement have heralded the arrival of a new school of literary studies that promises-or threatens-to profoundly shift the current paradigm. This revolutionary approach, known as Darwinian literary studies, is based on a few simple premises: evolution has produced a universal landscape of the human mind that can be scientifically mapped; these universal tendencies are reflected in the composition, reception, and interpretation of literary works; and an understanding of the evolutionary foundations of human behavior, psychology, and culture will enable literary scholars to gain powerful new perspectives on the elements, form, and nature of storytelling.
The goal of this book is to overcome some of the widespread misunderstandings about the meaning of a Darwinian approach to the human mind generally, and literature specifically. The volume brings together scholars from the forefront of the new field of evolutionary literary analysis-both literary analysts who have made evolution their explanatory framework and evolutionist scientists who have taken a serious interest in literature-to show how the human propensity for literature and art can be properly framed as a true evolutionary problem. Their work is an important step toward the long-prophesied synthesis of the humanities and what Steven Pinker calls "the new sciences of human nature."
The goal of this book is to overcome some of the widespread misunderstandings about the meaning of a Darwinian approach to the human mind generally, and literature specifically. The volume brings together scholars from the forefront of the new field of evolutionary literary analysis-both literary analysts who have made evolution their explanatory framework and evolutionist scientists who have taken a serious interest in literature-to show how the human propensity for literature and art can be properly framed as a true evolutionary problem. Their work is an important step toward the long-prophesied synthesis of the humanities and what Steven Pinker calls "the new sciences of human nature."
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780810122871
ISBN-10: 0810122871
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Northwestern University Press
Seria Rethinking Theory
ISBN-10: 0810122871
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Northwestern University Press
Colecția Northwestern University Press
Seria Rethinking Theory
Notă biografică
Jonathan Gottschall has a Phd in English and teaches at St. Lawrence University.
David Sloan Wilson is professor of biology and anthropology at Binghamton University.
David Sloan Wilson is professor of biology and anthropology at Binghamton University.
Cuprins
E. O. Wilson
Foreword to the Scientific Side
Frederick Crews
Foreword to the Literary Side
Jonathan Gottschall and David Sloan Wilson
Introduction: Literature—a Last Frontier in Human Evolutionary Studies
Part I: Evolution and Literary Theory
Ian McEwan
Literature, Science, and Human Nature
David Sloan Wilson
Evolutionary Social Constructivism
Dylan Evans
From Lacan to Darwin
Daniel Nettle
What Happens in Hamlet? Exploring the Psychological Foundations of Drama
Joseph Carroll
Human Nature and Literary Meaning: A Theoretical Model Illustrated with a Critique of Pride and Prejudice
Marcus Nordlund
The Problem of Romantic Love: Shakespeare and Evolutionary Psychology
Robin Fox
Male Bonding in the Epics and Romances
Part II: The Evolutionary Riddle of Art
Brian Boyd
Evolutionary Theories of Art
Michelle Scalise Sugiyama
Reverse-Engineering Narrative: Evidence of Special Design
Part III: Darwinian Theory and Scientific Methods
Jonathan Gottschall
Quantitative Literary Study: A Modest Manifesto and Testing the Hypotheses of Feminist Fairy Tale Studies
Daniel J. Kruger, Maryanne Fisher, and Ian Jobling
Proper Hero Dads and Dark Hero Cads: Alternate Mating Strategies Exemplified in British Romantic Literature
Catherine Salmon
Crossing the Abyss: Erotica and the Intersection of Evolutionary Psychology and Literary Studies
Denis Dutton
Afterword
Works Cited
Contributors
Foreword to the Scientific Side
Frederick Crews
Foreword to the Literary Side
Jonathan Gottschall and David Sloan Wilson
Introduction: Literature—a Last Frontier in Human Evolutionary Studies
Part I: Evolution and Literary Theory
Ian McEwan
Literature, Science, and Human Nature
David Sloan Wilson
Evolutionary Social Constructivism
Dylan Evans
From Lacan to Darwin
Daniel Nettle
What Happens in Hamlet? Exploring the Psychological Foundations of Drama
Joseph Carroll
Human Nature and Literary Meaning: A Theoretical Model Illustrated with a Critique of Pride and Prejudice
Marcus Nordlund
The Problem of Romantic Love: Shakespeare and Evolutionary Psychology
Robin Fox
Male Bonding in the Epics and Romances
Part II: The Evolutionary Riddle of Art
Brian Boyd
Evolutionary Theories of Art
Michelle Scalise Sugiyama
Reverse-Engineering Narrative: Evidence of Special Design
Part III: Darwinian Theory and Scientific Methods
Jonathan Gottschall
Quantitative Literary Study: A Modest Manifesto and Testing the Hypotheses of Feminist Fairy Tale Studies
Daniel J. Kruger, Maryanne Fisher, and Ian Jobling
Proper Hero Dads and Dark Hero Cads: Alternate Mating Strategies Exemplified in British Romantic Literature
Catherine Salmon
Crossing the Abyss: Erotica and the Intersection of Evolutionary Psychology and Literary Studies
Denis Dutton
Afterword
Works Cited
Contributors
Recenzii
"The essays [in The Literary Animal] include some learned, boldly stimulating inquiries into the possible functions of literature as a category of endeavor and experience. Although such discourse looks nearer to anthropology and psychology than to criticism per se, its breadth of perspective and marshaling of solidly grounded research put to shame what usually passes for interdisciplinarity in literary study." —Frederick Crews
Descriere
In recent years, articles in major periodicals from the New York Times Magazine to the Times Literary Supplement have heralded the arrival of a new school of literary studies that promises-or threatens-to profoundly shift the current paradigm. This revolutionary approach, known as Darwinian literary studies, is based on a few simple premises: evolution has produced a universal landscape of the human mind that can be scientifically mapped; these universal tendencies are reflected in the composition, reception, and interpretation of literary works; and an understanding of the evolutionary foundations of human behavior, psychology, and culture will enable literary scholars to gain powerful new perspectives on the elements, form, and nature of storytelling.