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The early evolutionary imagination: Literature and human nature

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Jonsson, Emelie Unknown Springer International Publishing (Cham, Switzerland , 2021) (eng) English 9783030827380 Cognitive studies in literature and performance 1st ed. LITERATURE, MODERN; Unknown Darwinian evolution is an imaginative problem that has been passed down to us unsolved. It is our most powerful explanation of humanity’s place in nature, but it is also more cognitively demanding and less emotionally satisfying than any myth. From the publication of the Origin of Species in 1859, evolution has pushed our capacity for storytelling into overdrive, sparking fairy tales, adventure stories, political allegories, utopias, dystopias, social realist novels, and existential meditations. Though this influence on literature has been widely studied, it has not been explained psychologically. This book argues for the adaptive function of storytelling, integrates traditional humanist scholarship with current knowledge about the evolved and adapted human mind, and calls for literary scholars to reframe their interpretation of the first authors who responded to Darwin.

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1 online resource (xii, 300 p.) Unknown Unknown

Summary / review / table of contents

Chapter 1: Using Evolution to Explain the Evolutionary Imagination.-
Chapter 2 Myth-Making in Early Evolutionary Thought.-
Chapter 3: Darwinism in Literature.-
Chapter 4: From Adventure to Utopia.-
Chapter 5: Jack London's Evolutionary Imagination.-
Chapter 6: H. G. Wells's Evolutionary Imagination.-
Chapter 7: Joseph Conrad's Evolutionary Imagination.-
The Unimaginable Place in Nature.


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Access no. Call number Location Status
00629/22 809.9336 Jon E Online Available