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Rating:  Summary: Publisher's information Review: Research on human intelligence has postulated that studying the structure and use of stories can provide important insight into the roots of self and the nature of thinking. In that spirit, this volume focuses on narrative as a crossroads where cognitive and social psychology, linguistics, literary theory, and the recent hybrid called "cognitive narratology" intersect, suggesting new directions for the cognitive sciences. The ideas contained here demonstrate the importance of narrative as a cognitive style, a genre of discourse, and a resource for literary writing and other forms of communication.Table of Contents Contributors Preface Acknowledgments 1. Introduction David Herman I: Approaches to Narrative and Cognition 2. Cognitive Psychological Foundations of Narrative Experiences Richard J. Gerrig and Giovanna Egidi 3. Narrative Construction, Cognitive Processing, and Health Kitty Klein 4. Semantics and Narrative in Therapeutic Discourse William Frawley, John T. Murray, and Raoul N. Smith II: Narrative as Cognitive Endowment 5. Double-scope Stories Mark Turner 6. Unnarratable Knowledge: The Difficulty of Understanding Evolution by Natural Selection H. Porter Abbott 7. Stories as a Tool for Thinking David Herman III: New Directions for Cognitive Narratology 8. 'Awake! Open your eyes!' The Cognitive Logic of External and Internal Stories Manfred Jahn 9. Cognitive Maps and the Construction of Narrative Space Marie-Laure Ryan 10. Natural Narratology and Cognitive Parameters Monika Fludernik IV: Fictional Minds 11. Cognitive Science, the Thinking Mind, and Literary Narrative Uri Margolin 12. Constructing Social Space: Sociocognitive Factors in the Interpretation of Character Relations Catherine Emmott 13. The Mind Beyond the Skin Alan Palmer Name Index Subject Index
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