In this Book

Imagining Minds: The Neuro-Aesthetics of Austen, Eliot, and Hardy

Book
2010
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summary
Imagining Minds explores how the novels of Austen, Eliot, and Hardy create the felt-quality of their authoring minds and of the minds they author by bringing their writing in relation to cognitive neuroscience accounts of the mind-brain, especially of William James and Antonio Damasio. It is in that relational space between the novels and theories of mind-brain that Kay Young works through her fundamental claim: the novel writes about the nature of mind, narrates it at work, and stimulates us to know deepened experiences of consciousness in its touching of our reading minds. While, in addition to James and Damasio, Young draws on a range of theories of mind-brain generated by current research in philosophy, neuroscience, cognitive science, psychology, psychiatry, and psychoanalysis to help her understand the novel’s imagining of mind, her claim is that those disciplines cannot themselves perform the more fully integrated because embodied and emotionally stimulating mind work of the novel—mind work that prompts us as their readers to better know our own minds.

Table of Contents

Cover

pp. 1-1

Title Page, Copyright

pp. 2-5

Contents

pp. vi-7

Illustrations & Tables

pp. vii-9

Prologue

pp. ix-13

Introduction

pp. 1-26

Part I

pp. 27-41

“A Mind Lively and at Ease”

pp. 29-50

“You Pierce My Soul”

pp. 51-68

Part II

pp. 69-83

“A Voice Like Music”

pp. 71-93

“Beloved Ideas Made Flesh”

pp. 94-124

Part III

pp. 125-139

“Now I Am Melancholy Mad”

pp. 127-156

“That Blue Narcotic Haze”

pp. 157-184

The Neurology of Narrative

pp. 185-194

Acknowledgments

pp. 195-196

Bibliography

pp. 197-206

Index

pp. 207-218
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