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Session Submission Type: Roundtable
Cognitive perspectives on works of literature, insofar as they transcend matters of individual biography, would seem to apply to all readers; since they identify human universals, they help explain why readers can be so diverse, ranging well beyond the original target audience. Substantial findings in this line of research possess the great virtue of being exportable: they presumably can be applied to other works. Secondly, they are falsifiable: the relationship between psychology and literature should be a two-way street, one that can be widened to include a great variety of acknowledged achievements in other fields. In addition, especially thanks to recent clinical findings, this combined perspective enjoys a multitude of promising approaches. It is also a means of noting consilience between diverse viewpoints. Our roundtable is designed to compare, contrast, and evaluate formal studies drawing cognitive insights implicit in such fields as preparation of theatrical performance, conduct of the bereavement process, neurophysiology, and cultural semiotics.
Veronica Allen
Brett Cooke, Texas A&M U
Tom Dolack, Wheaton College
Jessica Lynn Ginocchio, UNC at Chapel Hill
Mike Green