"I think I feel my thinking-self and how it stands" : self and cognitive identity in the poetry of Jorie Graham
This work aims to reconsider how we think about identity in the poetry of Jorie Graham by employing neuroscientist Antonio Damasio’s theory of the cognitively structured ‘autobiographical self’. Damasio’s specialised usage of the ‘autobiographical self’ refers to a multi-levelled and ever-changing m...
Main Author: | Alghamdi, Mariam Ahmad M. |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Middleton, Peter ; Marsh, Nicola |
Published: |
University of Southampton
2018
|
Online Access: | https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.759262 |
Similar Items
-
Time and manner in the poetry of Jorie Graham
by: Bishop, S. L.
Published: (2009) -
Where Intellect and Intuition Converge: Epistemological Errancies in the Poetry of Jorie Graham
by: Pettinger, Terry Lynn O'Brien
Published: (2014) -
Chaos/Complexity Theory and Postmodern Poetry: A Case Study of Jorie Graham’s “Fuse”
by: Roghayeh Farsi
Published: (2017-09-01) -
The Causality of Casualness in the Translations of World Poetry: Jorie Graham vs Mary Oliver in Italy
by: Paola Loreto
Published: (2014-10-01) -
"The Meditation Place Demands": Jorie Graham's Ecopoetry
by: Yu-an Tu, et al.