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Against Literary Darwinism

Critical Inquiry 37 (2):315-347 (2011)

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  1. Wit and Poetry and Pope, or The Handicap Principle: Responses to "Against Literary Darwinism," by Jonathan Kramnick.Blakey Vermeule - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):426-430.
  • IIFor Evocriticism: Minds Shaped to Be Reshaped.Brian Boyd - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):394-404.
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  • IIIAn Open Letter to Jonathan Kramnick.Joseph Carroll - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):405-410.
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  • VIILiterary Studies and Science: A Reply to My Critics.Jonathan Kramnick - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):431-460.
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  • Social Science and Neuroscience beyond Interdisciplinarity: Experimental Entanglements. Des Fitzgerald & Felicity Callard - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (1):3-32.
    This article is an account of the dynamics of interaction across the social sciences and neurosciences. Against an arid rhetoric of ‘interdisciplinarity’, it calls for a more expansive imaginary of what experiment – as practice and ethos – might offer in this space. Arguing that opportunities for collaboration between social scientists and neuroscientists need to be taken seriously, the article situates itself against existing conceptualizations of these dynamics, grouping them under three rubrics: ‘critique’, ‘ebullience’ and ‘interaction’. Despite their differences, each (...)
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  • Minds in and out of time: memory, embodied skill, anachronism, and performance.Evelyn Tribble & John Sutton - 2012 - Textual Practice 26 (4):587-607.
    Contemporary critical instincts, in early modern studies as elsewhere in literary theory, often dismiss invocations of mind and cognition as inevitably ahistorical, as performing a retrograde version of anachronism. Arguing that our experience of time is inherently anachronistic and polytemporal, we draw on the frameworks of distributed cognition and extended mind to theorize cognition as itself distributed, cultural, and temporal. Intelligent, embodied action is a hybrid process, involving the coordination of disparate neural, affective, cognitive, interpersonal, ecological, technological, and cultural resources. (...)
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  • Evolutionary Studies in the Humanities: The Case of Music.Gary Tomlinson - 2013 - Critical Inquiry 39 (4):647-675.
  • Critical Response V: Evolved Reading and the Science of Literary Study: A Response to Jonathan Kramnick: Responses to "Against Literary Darwinism," by Jonathan Kramnick.G. Gabrielle Starr - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):418-425.
  • IVLiving in Duplicate: Victorian Science and Literature Today.Vanessa L. Ryan - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):411-417.
  • Motherhood, evolutionary psychology and mirror neurons or: ‘Grammar is politics by other means’.Karín Lesnik-Oberstein - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (2):171-187.
    Through a close analysis of socio-biologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy’s work on motherhood and ‘mirror neurons’ it is argued that Hrdy’s claims exemplify how research that ostensibly bases itself on neuroscience, including in literary studies ‘literary Darwinism’, relies after all not on scientific, but on political assumptions, namely on underlying, unquestioned claims about the autonomous, transparent, liberal agent of consumer capitalism. These underpinning assumptions, it is further argued, involve the suppression or overlooking of an alternative, prior tradition of feminist theory, including (...)
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  • VIILiterary Studies and Science: A Reply to My Critics.Jonathan Kramnick - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):431-460.
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  • Criticism and Truth.Jonathan Kramnick - 2021 - Critical Inquiry 47 (2):218-240.
    This essay makes a case for the truth claims of literary criticism by examining the epistemology of close reading. It looks closely at skilled practices of quotation and asks what distinctive kind of knowledge they exhibit and create.
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  • IIIAn Open Letter to Jonathan Kramnick.Joseph Carroll - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):405-410.
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  • IWho Cares about the Evolution of Stories?Paul Bloom - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):388-393.
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