Christopher Collins introduces an exciting new field of research
traversing evolutionary biology, anthropology, archaeology,
cognitive psychology, linguistics, neuroscience, and literary
study. Paleopoetics maps the selective processes that originally
shaped the human genus millions of years ago and prepared the human
brain to play, imagine, empathize, and engage in fictive thought as
mediated by language. A manifestation of the "cognitive turn" in
the humanities, "Paleopoetics" calls for a broader, more integrated
interpretation of the reading experience, one that restores our
connection to the ancient methods of thought production still
resonating within us.
Speaking with authority on the scientific aspects of cognitive
poetics, Collins proposes reading literature using cognitive skills
that predate language and writing. These include the brain's
capacity to perceive the visible world, store its images, and
retrieve them later to form simulated mental events. Long before
humans could share stories through speech, they perceived,
remembered, and imagined their own inner narratives. Drawing on a
wide range of evidence, Collins builds an evolutionary bridge
between humans' development of sensorimotor skills and their
achievement of linguistic cognition, bringing current scientific
perspective to such issues as the structure of narrative, the
distinction between metaphor and metonymy, the relation of rhetoric
to poetics, the relevance of performance theory to reading, the
difference between orality and writing, and the nature of play and
imagination.
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