Fall 2023 Comparative Literature & Society GU4510 section 001

The Mind Between Literature and the Brai

Mind Between Lit and Brai

Call Number 15984
Day & Time
Location
M 4:10pm-6:00pm
301M Fayerweather
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Valerio Amoretti
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

What — to paraphrase Catherine Malabou — should literary studies do with neuroscience? How should critics and theorists approach the wealth of research about the neural bases of cognition? Should empirical findings about the brain supplant or complement interpretative and speculative theories of the psyche in the literary critic’s toolkit? Is the psyche and its “inner life” still a meaningful level of analysis for literary scholars? 
The field of “cognitive literary studies,” as the heterogeneous body of work drawing from research psychology, cognitive science and neuroscience is known, has steadily grown in stature over the last few decades, in lockstep with the burgeoning prominence of neuroscience in popular culture and within the academy. Some of its exponents argue that the rise of neuroscience must imply the decline of psychoanalysis and other “folk” psychologies. Others point to the constraints of reproducibility and of the empirical method as insur-mountable handicaps for the study of complex cultural objects such as literature.  
In this seminar, we will consider the literary experience as a whole — from the act of reading and comprehension, to the affective impact of reading and even the lifelong permanence in one’s memory and imagination of what Eve Sedgwick called “phantasy books” — and ask which parts of the experience can be fruitfully elucidated by reference to empirical knowledge about neural processes. Individual classes will focus on neuro-phenomenology, neuro-psychoanalysis, neuro-aesthetics, the neuroscience of reading, theory of mind, affect studies and critical theory.  
We complement these theoretical explorations with a small archive of twentieth-century writing (by Virginia Woolf, Samuel Beckett, Alain Robbe-Grillet, W.G. Sebald and Sarah Kane) that questions and subverts our assumptions about the representation of mental life in literary work.  
The course has no pre-requisites and it is open to undergraduate and graduate students. 

Web Site Vergil
Department Comparative Literature and Society, Institute for
Enrollment 14 students (20 max) as of 12:07PM Monday, April 29, 2024
Subject Comparative Literature & Society
Number GU4510
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Campus Morningside
Section key 20233CPLS4510W001