Second Workshop Program
Literature and the Cognitive Revolution
Second Workshop Chair: Anne Williams
 

Second Workshop:
Literary History and the Brain

Cognitive science typically assumes that the mental structures it studies are invariant over historical time, while literary history tends to adopt the contrary presupposition, that nothing historically invariant comes within its purview. We would like to challenge both of these assumptions, and to forge a middle ground where culture can be shown both to emerge out of and also to feed back into the structure of the brain. Work at the intersection of literary studies and cognitive science has to date tended to adopt a synchronic approach, focusing on subjects such as figurative language, narrative, genre, or poetics. At the same time recent studies in Cognitive science demonstrate an increasing awareness of the importance of historical and other contingent factors in the development and "attunement" of mental structures. How might such factors be taken into account by cultural historians working with cognitivist paradigms or presuppositions? The three proposals for this panel represent three distinct, but compatible, attempts to situate identifiable cognitive structures and procedures, as concretely embodied in literary texts, within their historical contexts.
 
 

Second Workshop Program
Literature and the Cognitive Revolution
Second Workshop Chair: Anne Williams