Literary Memory: Scott's Waverley Novels and the Psychology of NarrativeBucknell University Press, 2003 - 249 Seiten This book draws together three different but related kinds of inquiry. First, it approaches the history and theory of memory in the long eighteenth century to focus on the philosphical and literary writing of Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment Scotland. Debates about the significance ad working of memory and the nature of cognition were recurrent and contentious throughout the period, and were particularly pronunced in Scotland, where the psychological tradition of common sense philosophy developed in response to the skeptial metaphysics of David Hume. This book examines the importance of these debates for the literature and culture of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries: Walter Scott is exemplary, as his thinking about memory was conditioned by the epistemologial arguments of the Scottish enlightenment. Second, it studies Scott's rhetoric of memory and his engagement with, and transformation of, Enlightenment psychological categories, most significantly in the Waverley Novels. Finally, this book is concerned with the role of memory in literary creativity. |
Inhalt
29 | |
Associative Memory | 49 |
Social Memory | 75 |
Legal Memory | 101 |
Fragmentary Memory | 129 |
Literary Memory and Postmortem Effects | 154 |
Notes | 179 |
Bibliography | 208 |
244 | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abbotsford Aberdeen Alan American argues associative memory ballads Cambridge University Press chapter epigraph characters Chicago Clara Clarendon Press Collected Culture Darsie Darsie's David Hewitt describes Dugald Stewart Edinburgh University Press Edited EEWN Effie eighteenth century England English Entail Essays feudal fiction Freud Galt George Gleig Hawthorne Heart of Mid-Lothian Highland Human Hume Hume's Ibid ideas imagination intertextual islands J. G. Lockhart Jacobite James James Fenimore Cooper Jeanie Jeanie's John John Galt Journal Letters literary memory Literature London Magnum Memoirs mind moral narrative narrator nature Norna Old Mortality Orkney Oxford University Press past Pattieson philosophical Pirate poetry political Porteous present Princeton principles psychology Redgauntlet Reid relation Robert romance Saint Ronan's Scotland Scots Scots law Scottish Enlightenment Shetland Sir Walter Scott social memory society songs Staunton story Studies tale theory Thomas Thomas Reid tion tradition trains of thought vols Washington Irving Waverley Novels William writing York
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 13 - ... this laying up of our ideas in the repository of the memory, signifies no more but this, that the mind has a power in many cases to revive perceptions, which it has once had, with this additional perception annexed to them, that it has had them before.
Seite 36 - ... intimately into what I call myself, I always stumble on some particular perception or other, of heat or cold, light or shade, love or hatred, pain or pleasure. I never can catch myself at any time without a perception, and never can observe anything but the perception.