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Stories, Meaning, and Experience: Narrativity and Enaction
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Stories, Meaning, and Experience: Narrativity and EnactionStories, Meaning, and Experience: Narrativity and Enaction

This book presents a complete reconsideration of the nature of narrative organization developed in the framework of a new and comprehensive approach to cognitive science: enaction. This new paradigm offers an understanding of human cognition based in the perception and sensory motor dynamics of an agent and a world. It argues that narrative is but one form of conceptual organization for human minds, the other being categorical organization.
 
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A Companion to George Eliot
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A Companion to George EliotA Companion to George Eliot

This collection offers students and scholars of Eliot’s work a timely critical reappraisal of her corpus, including her poetry and non-fiction, reflecting the latest developments in literary criticism. It features innovative analysis ­exploring the relation between Eliot’s Victorian intellectual sensibilities and those of our own era.
 
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What Makes This Book So Great: Re-Reading the Classics of Fantasy and SF
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What Makes This Book So Great: Re-Reading the Classics of Fantasy and SFWhat Makes This Book So Great: Re-Reading the Classics of Fantasy and SF

As any reader of Jo Walton's Among Others might guess, Walton is both an inveterate reader of SF and fantasy, and a chronic re-reader of books. In 2008, then-new science-fiction mega-site Tor.com asked Walton to blog regularly about her re-reading--about all kinds of older fantasy and SF, ranging from acknowledged classics, to guilty pleasures, to forgotten oddities and gems. These posts have consistently been among the most popular features of Tor.com. Now this volumes presents a selection of the best of them, ranging from short essays to long reassessments of some of the field's most ambitious series.
 
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Shakespeare, the Queen's Men, and the Elizabethan Performance of History
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Shakespeare, the Queen's Men, and the Elizabethan Performance of History

The Elizabethan history play was one of the most prevalent dramatic genres of the 1590s, and so was a major contribution to Elizabethan historical culture. The genre has been well served by critical studies that emphasize politics and ideology; however, there has been less interest in the way history is interrogated as an idea in these plays. Drawing in period-sensitive ways on the field of contemporary performance theory, this book looks at the Shakespearean history play from a fresh angle, by first analyzing the foundational work of the Queen's Men, the playing company that invented the popular history play.
 
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Romanticism and Philosophy: Thinking with Literature
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Romanticism and Philosophy: Thinking with LiteratureThis volume brings together a wide range of scholars to offer new perspectives on the relationship between Romanticism and philosophy. The entanglement of Romantic literature with philosophy is increasingly recognized, just as Romanticism is increasingly viewed as European and Transatlantic, yet few studies combine these coordinates and consider the philosophical significance of distinctly literary questions in British and American Romantic writings.
 
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