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This panel will address some interests of the growing body of literary
scholars who look to the cognitive neurosciences for theoretical and interpretive
tools. The intersection of Romantic studies with cognitive science
may prove especially complex and fruitful, as cognitive science offers
productive new ways of talking about emotion, language, memory, subjectivity
and the body. The panel will consider these issues from a variety
of critical perspectives and across a range of Romantic-era writing.
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Boston College |
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University of Alberta, Canada |
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UC Santa Barbara |
CogWeb: Cognitive Culture Theory. Francis Steen's site on the relevance of the study of human cognition to literary and cultural studies.
David Miall's home page: resources on literature and psychology, reader-response research, and Romanticism.
Literature, Cognition & the Brain: research at the intersection of literary studies, cognitive theory, and neuroscience. Edited by Mary Crane and Alan Richardson, Boston College.