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El. knyga: Novelistic Inquiries into the Mind

  • Formatas: 205 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Sep-2016
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443814096
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  • Formatas: 205 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-Sep-2016
  • Leidėjas: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443814096
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Novelistic Inquiries into the Mind traces the multiple relations between the mind and the contemporary novel. The contributors here examine various types of narrative fiction, ranging from the postmodern novels of J. M. Coetzee and Ian McEwan through the experimental prose of Leslie Scalapino to the popular fiction of James Dashner and Christopher Moore. On the one hand, they investigate novelistic representations of various mind-related issues, including different states of consciousness, Alzheimer's disease, thought experiments and formation of the self. On the other, by analysing and evaluating in these contexts such narrative devices as unreliable narration, development of conceptual networks or multimodal integration of verbal and non-verbal semiotic resources, they exemplify the multiplicity of techniques whereby the novel can explore the intricacies of mental processes.Taken together, the essays collected here demonstrate the potential of the novel as genre for representing the mind. In its exploration of the problems involved in the linguistic construction of reality, the cognitive function of art and the uncertain status of consciousness, the contemporary novel thus reflects the mind's urge to understand itself, as well as possible meanings of its own perceptions, creations and projections.
Introduction 1(6)
Grzegorz Maziarczyk
Joanna Klara Teske
Chapter One Thinking by Feeling: Consciousness in Iain Banks's The Bridge and The Player of Games
7(16)
Katarzyna Fetlinska
Chapter Two Apocalypse and A-bomb: States of Consciousness in John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces
23(20)
Olga Colbert
Chapter Three Chaotic Mind in Samantha Harvey's The Wilderness
43(16)
Sonia Front
Chapter Four "One's mind makes fictions as its function": Writing as Experimentation in Mind Formation in Leslie Scalapino's Defoe
59(18)
Malgorzata Myk
Chapter Five To Endure Love: Mental Illness and the Unreliability Syndrome
77(18)
Irena Ksiezopolska
Chapter Six Web of Madness: Conceptual Network and Consciousness in Will Self's The Book of Dave
95(18)
Robert Mirski
Chapter Seven Multimodal Experience: 21st-century Meaning-Making Strategies as Captured in Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
113(22)
Wioletta Chabko
Chapter Eight A Female Character in Search of a Self in J. M. Coetzee's Foe
135(14)
Urszula Golebiowska
Chapter Nine The Prison in J. M. Coetzee's Foe
149(14)
Jayendrina Singha Ray
Chapter Ten Consciousness Explored in The Maze Runner Trilogy
163(16)
Cristina Paravano
Chapter Eleven Too Jung to Die: A Timeless Body and Its Shadows
179(16)
Oskar Zasada
Contributors 195(2)
Index 197
Grzegorz Maziarczyk is Assistant Professor of English and American Literature at John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland. He has authored two monographs, The Narratee in Contemporary British Fiction (2005) and The Novel as Book: Textual Materiality in Contemporary Fiction in English (2013), and co-edited Echoes of Utopia: Notions, Rhetoric, Poetics (2012), as well as (Im)perfection Subverted, Reloaded and Networked: Utopian Discourse across Media (2015). Joanna Klara Teske is Assistant Professor of English Studies at John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin, Poland. She has published Philosophy in Fiction (2008), in addition to articles on the methodology of the humanities, cognitive potential of art and the postmodern novel.