Why we read fiction : theory of mind and the novel
Record details
- ISBN: 9780814251515
- ISBN: 9780814210284
- ISBN: 081425151X
- ISBN: 0814210287
- ISBN: 9780814272633
- ISBN: 9780814251515
- ISBN: 9780814210284
- ISBN: 0814272630
- ISBN: 081425151X
- ISBN: 0814210287
-
Physical Description:
1 online resource (x, 198 pages) : illustrations.
remote
Computer data. - Publisher: Columbus : The Ohio State University Press, [2006]
- Copyright: ©2006
Content descriptions
General Note: | CatMonthString:july.24 Multi-User. |
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 181-192) and index. |
Formatted Contents Note: | pt. 1. Attributing minds. Why did Peter Walsh tremble? -- What is mind-reading (also known as theory of mind)? -- Theory of mind, autism, and fiction : four caveats -- "Effortless" mind-reading -- Why do we read fiction? -- The novel as a cognitive experiment -- Can cognitive science tell us why we are afraid of Mrs. Dalloway? -- The relationship between a "cognitive" analysis of Mrs. Dalloway and the larger field of literary studies -- Woolf, Pinker, and the project of interdisciplinarity -- pt. 2. Tracking minds. Whose thought is it, anyway? -- Metarepresentational ability and schizophrenia -- Everyday failures of source-monitoring -- Monitoring fictional states of mind -- "Fictional" and "history" -- Tracking minds in Beowulf -- Don Quixote and his progeny -- Source-monitoring, ToM, and the figure of the unreliable narrator -- Source-monitoring and the implied author -- Richardson's Clarissa : the progress of the elated bridegroom -- Nabokov's Lolita : the deadly demon meets and destroys the tenderhearted boy -- pt. 3. Concealing minds. ToM and the detective novel : what does it take to suspect everybody? -- Why is reading a detective story a lot like lifting weights at the gym? -- Metarepresentationality and some recurrent patterns of the detective story -- A cognitive evolutionary perspective : always historicize! -- Conclusion : why do we read (and write) fiction? Authors meet their readers -- Is this why we read fiction? surely, there is more to it! |
Type of Computer File or Data Note: | Text (HTML), electronic book. |
System Details Note: | Mode of access: Internet. |
Terms Governing Use and Reproduction Note: | Access requires VIU IP addresses and is restricted to VIU students, faculty and staff. Access restricted by subscription. |
Issuing Body Note: | Made available online by JSTOR. |
Source of Description Note: | Print version record. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Fictional Work Fiction. Fiction Romans. |