Summoning
292 pages
English

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292 pages
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Description

This book explores the variety of ways that the Jewish understanding of the Covenant relates to the notion of a contract or a shared grammar as developed in recent structural and post-structural theory. The book enters the debate on the relationship beween a variety of open-ended forms of text interpretation and traditional Jewish interpretive practice, expanding and deepening that debate. Until now, the discussion has focused primarily on Midrashic interpretation; these essays balance the assumption of the openness of interpretation with an exploration of the concurrent restrictions on interpretation imposed by a covenant.

Acknowledgments

Introduction

The difficulties and advantages of assuming modularity of mind
Describing changes in literary systems
How can these claims be investigated?

1. Minds, Modules, and Models

The earliest and strongest version of the modularity hypothesis
Jackendoff's modularity theory
The visual and the language modules
Gardner's modularity theory
The crucial recognition of failure
Parrallel distributed processing models
Edelman's Neural Darwinism
Dennett's gappy consciousness
Summing up and hedging

2. New Genres: American Autobiography

Western American autobiography
The category fits the time

3. New Inferences: Reading Hamlet and the Politics of Genre

Resisting genre
Categorization and inference

4. Women Readers and Women's Rules

Fetterley's reading and Fetterley's rule
Gilbert's reading without Fetterley's rule
Categorization and transformation: Leaving room for the improbable

5. Intermodular Competition: Transformation and Inference

Metaphor and vision
Preference rules
Advantages and risks of multiple coding

6. Immobile and Immortal in the Monument of Literary History

Resistance to change: The conservatism if the experienced reader
The link between the Middle Ages and the Renaissance
Spearing's dignity conditions and alterity conditions
The Bloom connection

7. Writing Literary History: Neoclassicism, Modularity, and the New Histories

Viewer-centered and object-centered understanding
Speaker-centered vs. public language
Interaction of the object-centered and the viewer-centered
Leaving space for the other
New historical criticism
Listening to others

8. The Dynamic of Freedom and Compulsion

The inevitability of contradiction
A Summary of the possibilities for change in the modular mind
Building culture into the survival of the species
Resisting reading

Notes
References

Index

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 01 février 2012
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781438420844
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 19 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1648€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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