Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Literary Neurophysiology : Memory, Race, Sex, and Representation in U.S. Writing, 1860-1914, PDF eBook

Literary Neurophysiology : Memory, Race, Sex, and Representation in U.S. Writing, 1860-1914 PDF

Part of the Oxford Studies in American Literary History series

PDF

Please note: eBooks can only be purchased with a UK issued credit card and all our eBooks (ePub and PDF) are DRM protected.

Description

Writing about the brain and the nervous system more than a century ago, what were U.S. authors doing? Literary Neurophysiology: Memory, Race, Sex, and Representation in U.S.

Writing, 1860-1914 examines their use of literature to experiment with the new materialist psychology, a science that was challenging their capacity to represent reality and forging new understandings of race and sexuality. Late-nineteenth and eartly-twentieth century authors sometimes emulated scientific epistemology, allowing their art and conceptions of creativity to be reshaped by it, but more often they imaginatively investigated neurophysiological theories, challenging and rewriting scientific explanations of human identity and behavior.

By enfolding physiological experimentation into literary inquiries that could nonreductively account for psychological and social complexities beyond the reach of thelaboratory, they used literature as a cognitive medium.

Mark Twain, W. D. Howells, and Gertrude Stein come together as they probe the effects on mimesis and creativity of reflex-based automatisms and unconscious meaning-making.

Oliver Wendell Holmes explores conceptions of racial nerve force elaborated inpopulation statistics and biopolitics, while W.

E. B. Du Bois and Pauline Hopkins contest notions of racial energy used to predict the extinction of African Americans.

Holmes explores new definitions of "sexual inversion" as, in divergent ways, Whitman and John Addington Symonds evaluate relations among nerve force, human fecundity, and the supposed grave of nonreproductive sex.

Carefully tracing entanglements and conflicts between literary culture and mental science of this period, Knoperreveals unexpected connections among these authors and fresh insights into the science they confronted.

Considering their writing as cognitive practice, he provides a new understanding of literary realism and of the emergent distinction between literary and scientific knowledge.

Information

Other Formats

Information

Also in the Oxford Studies in American Literary History series  |  View all