Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives

This thesis offers a new approach to mind modelling in modernist narratives. Taking Nietzsche’s work as exemplary of modernist ideas about cognition’s relational basis, I argue that conceptual blending theory, a particularly cogent model of a fundamental cognitive process, has roots in modernism. I...

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Main Author: Copland, Sarah
Other Authors: Cuddy-Keane, Melba
Language:en_ca
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/19027
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-190272013-04-17T04:17:46ZModelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist NarrativesCopland, SarahModernist NarrativesCognitive ApproachesRhetorical ApproachesConceptual BlendingReading0298This thesis offers a new approach to mind modelling in modernist narratives. Taking Nietzsche’s work as exemplary of modernist ideas about cognition’s relational basis, I argue that conceptual blending theory, a particularly cogent model of a fundamental cognitive process, has roots in modernism. I read inscriptions of relational cognition in modernist narratives as “conceptual blends” that invite cognitive mobility as a central facet of reader response. These blends, which integrate conceptual domains, invite similarity-seeing and difference-seeing, exposing the reader to new conceptual content and new cognitive styles; she is thus better able to negotiate the reading-related complexities of modernist narrative’s formal innovations and the real-world complexities of modernity’s local and global upheavals. Chapter One considers blending’s interrelated rhetorical motivations and cognitive effects in Chiang Yee’s Silent Traveller narratives: bringing together English and Chinese domains, Chiang’s blends defamiliarize his readers’ culturally entrenched assumptions, invite collaborative reading strategies, and thus equip his readers for relating flexibly to a newly globalized world. Moving away from blends in a text’s narration, Chapter Two focuses on blends as textual structuring principles. I read Virginia Woolf’s The Waves as a thinking mind with fundamentally relational cognitive processes; I consider the mobile cognitive operations we perform reading about a text’s mind thinking and thinking along with it. Chapters Three and Four cross the nebulous text-peritext border to examine blends in modernist prefaces. Chapter Three focuses on blends in Joseph Conrad’s and Henry James’s prefaces, relating them, through the reading strategies they invite, to the narratives they accompany. Chapter Four considers allographic prefaces to Arthur Morrison’s Tales of Mean Streets and two of Chiang’s narratives: blends in these prefaces invite the cognitive mobility necessary for reconceptualizing both allographic preface-text and East-West relations. All four chapters treat the modernist narrative text as a textual system whose blends, often interacting and borderless, signal reciprocal, mutually permeable relations among its textual levels. Dialogic relations also underwrite the interaction between these blends and blends the reader performs when engaging with them. Modernist narratives model (bear inscriptions of) cognition’s relational processes in order to model (shape) the reader’s mind.Cuddy-Keane, Melba2009-112010-02-18T17:44:13ZNO_RESTRICTION2010-02-18T17:44:13Z2010-02-18T17:44:13ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/19027en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic Modernist Narratives
Cognitive Approaches
Rhetorical Approaches
Conceptual Blending
Reading
0298
spellingShingle Modernist Narratives
Cognitive Approaches
Rhetorical Approaches
Conceptual Blending
Reading
0298
Copland, Sarah
Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
description This thesis offers a new approach to mind modelling in modernist narratives. Taking Nietzsche’s work as exemplary of modernist ideas about cognition’s relational basis, I argue that conceptual blending theory, a particularly cogent model of a fundamental cognitive process, has roots in modernism. I read inscriptions of relational cognition in modernist narratives as “conceptual blends” that invite cognitive mobility as a central facet of reader response. These blends, which integrate conceptual domains, invite similarity-seeing and difference-seeing, exposing the reader to new conceptual content and new cognitive styles; she is thus better able to negotiate the reading-related complexities of modernist narrative’s formal innovations and the real-world complexities of modernity’s local and global upheavals. Chapter One considers blending’s interrelated rhetorical motivations and cognitive effects in Chiang Yee’s Silent Traveller narratives: bringing together English and Chinese domains, Chiang’s blends defamiliarize his readers’ culturally entrenched assumptions, invite collaborative reading strategies, and thus equip his readers for relating flexibly to a newly globalized world. Moving away from blends in a text’s narration, Chapter Two focuses on blends as textual structuring principles. I read Virginia Woolf’s The Waves as a thinking mind with fundamentally relational cognitive processes; I consider the mobile cognitive operations we perform reading about a text’s mind thinking and thinking along with it. Chapters Three and Four cross the nebulous text-peritext border to examine blends in modernist prefaces. Chapter Three focuses on blends in Joseph Conrad’s and Henry James’s prefaces, relating them, through the reading strategies they invite, to the narratives they accompany. Chapter Four considers allographic prefaces to Arthur Morrison’s Tales of Mean Streets and two of Chiang’s narratives: blends in these prefaces invite the cognitive mobility necessary for reconceptualizing both allographic preface-text and East-West relations. All four chapters treat the modernist narrative text as a textual system whose blends, often interacting and borderless, signal reciprocal, mutually permeable relations among its textual levels. Dialogic relations also underwrite the interaction between these blends and blends the reader performs when engaging with them. Modernist narratives model (bear inscriptions of) cognition’s relational processes in order to model (shape) the reader’s mind.
author2 Cuddy-Keane, Melba
author_facet Cuddy-Keane, Melba
Copland, Sarah
author Copland, Sarah
author_sort Copland, Sarah
title Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
title_short Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
title_full Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
title_fullStr Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
title_full_unstemmed Modelling the Mind: Conceptual Blending and Modernist Narratives
title_sort modelling the mind: conceptual blending and modernist narratives
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/19027
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