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Full Description
This book brings together 11 essays by international specialists in Victorian culture and modernism and provides a general and period-specific introduction to distributed cognition and the cognitive humanities. The essays revitalise our reading of Victorian and modernist works in the fields of history of technology, science and medicine, material culture, philosophy, art and literary studies by bringing to bear recent insights in cognitive science and philosophy of mind on the ways in which cognition is distributed across brain, body and world.
Contents
List of illustrations
Series Preface
1. Series Introduction: Distributed Cognition and the Humanities
Miranda Anderson, Michael Wheeler and Mark Sprevak
2. Introduction
i. Distributed Cognition in Victorian and Modernism Studies - An Overview
Peter Garratt
ii. Distributed Cognition in Victorian and Modernism Studies - Our Volume
Miranda Anderson
3. The Victorian Extended Mind: George Eliot, Psychology, and the Bounds of Cognition
Peter Garratt
4. Instrumental Eyes: Enacted and Interactive Perception in Victorian Optical Technologies and Victorian Fiction
Nicole Garrod-Bush
5. Aesthetic Perception and Embodied Cognition: Art and Literature at the Fin de Siècle
Marion Thain
6. The Heterocosmic Self: Analogy, Temporality and Structural Couplings in Proust's Swann's Way
Marco Bernini
7. Distributed Cognition and the Phenomenology of Modernist Painting and Poetry (Rilke and Cézanne)
Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei
8. Directionality and Duration in Distributed Consciousness: Modernist Perspectives on Photographic Objectivity
Adam Lively
9. Walking, Identity and Visual Perception in Romantic and Modernist Literature
Andrew Michael Roberts and Eleanore Widger
10. Surrealism, Chance and the Extended Mind
Kerry Watson
11. Distributed Cognition, Porous Qualia, and Modernist Narrative
Melba Cuddy-Keane
12. Nietzsche's Genealogie der Moral pro and contra distributed cognition
E. T. Troscianko
13. A 5th E: Distributed Cognition and the Question of Ethics in Benjamin and Vygotsky, and Horkheimer and DeweyBen Morgan
Notes on contributors
Bibliography
Index