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The Poem as Icon

A Study in Aesthetic Cognition
BuchGebunden
228 Seiten
Englisch
Sydney University Presserschienen am18.06.2020
The Poem as Icon resolves long-standing questions of poetic function from a cognitive perspective. Margaret Freeman shows how poetry, as one expression of the aesthetic faculty, enables us to iconically access and experience the "being" of reality.mehr
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EUR159,50
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Produkt

KlappentextThe Poem as Icon resolves long-standing questions of poetic function from a cognitive perspective. Margaret Freeman shows how poetry, as one expression of the aesthetic faculty, enables us to iconically access and experience the "being" of reality.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-0-19-008041-9
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
FormatGenäht
Erscheinungsjahr2020
Erscheinungsdatum18.06.2020
Seiten228 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 156 mm, Höhe 234 mm, Dicke 14 mm
Gewicht490 g
Artikel-Nr.54439575

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
PrefaceChapter 1 Poetic Cognition1. Iconicity and the Being of Reality2. Toward a Theory of Aesthetic Cognition3. The Sentience of Cognition4. Developing a Multidisciplinary Terminology5. Outline of ChaptersChapter 2 Icon1. What Is an Icon?1.1 The semiotic icon1.2 The religious icon1.3 The linguistic icon1.4 The popular icon2. The Slippery Slopes of Meaning2.1 Reification as cognitive economy2.2 The form-content dichotomy3. Iconicity in the Arts4. Iconicity in Literary CriticismChapter 3 Semblance1. Beyond Mimesis2. Manifestation 3. The In-visibility of Being4. The Ontology of Poetic Perception as Iconic of Reality4.1 Prosodic structure4.2 Prepositional use4.3 Concealed images4.4 Sound patterningChapter 4 Metaphor1. Metaphor as Actual World Formation2. Metaphor as Possible World Formation3. Metaphor in the Literary Arts4. The Semeosis of Poetic Metaphor5. Metaphoring as Cognitive Processing6. The Hierarchy of Cognitive Metaphoring7. The Ontology of Poetic Metaphor8. The Role of Metaphor in Poetic IconicityChapter 5 Schema1. Probing Sensate Cognition2. Schema as Correlation Between Self and World3. Schema as Constraint on Experience4. The Role of Schema in Imagination and Language5. Schema as Internalizing Sensate Structure in Poetry6. PATH and VERTICALITY Schemata in Li Bai's Shudaoan7. The Poetic Use of Schema8. Schema as Defining a PoeticsChapter 6 Affect1. The Synaesthetics of Affect2. Sonic and Structural Prosodies3. The Import of Affect4. Schema Theory and the Structure of Affects5. The Force Dynamics of Affective Schemata5.1 The level of hearer/reader - poem5.2 The level of physical - force elements5.3 The level of sound - sight5.4 The level of internal sensibility - external stimuli5.5 The level of interior memory - interior emotion6. Emotive - Conceptual SchemataChapter 7 The Poem as Icon1. A Case Study of Two Poems1.1 Prosodic details in Smith's sonnet1.2 Prosodic details in Shelley's sonnet2. The Workings of Poetic Iconicity2.1 The trap of the gap2.2 Closing the gap3. The Poetic Icon3.1 I Seventy Years Later3.2 II The Poem as Icon3.3 III Forms of the Rock in a Night-Hymn4. The Transformative Power of the IconChapter 8 Aesthetic Cognition1. The Aesthetic Faculty2. Aesthetic Function3. Aesthetic Iconicity in the Arts4. Aesthetic Evaluation5. Iconic Aesthetics in "Dover Beach"Afterword1. Poetry in Context2. Eve's Dilemma3. A Theory of Everything?4. Poetry as an Icon of the Being of RealityGlossaryReferencesIndexmehr

Autor

Margaret H. Freeman is Professor Emerita, Los Angeles Valley College; past president of the Emily Dickinson International Society (1988-1992); co-director of Myrifield Institute for Cognition and the Arts (myrifield.org); and co-editor of the Oxford University Press series Cognition and Poetics. Her research interests include aesthetics, cognitive poetics, linguistics, literature, and philosophy.