The Limits of Expression
Taking as its starting point what is sometimes called 'the prison house of language' - the widespread feeling that language falls terribly short when it comes to articulating the rich and disparate contents of the human mental tapestry - this book sets out a radically new view of the interplay between language, literature and mind. Shifting the focus from the literary text itself to literature as a case of human agency, it reconsiders a wide range of interdisciplinary issues including the move from world to mind, the existence or otherwise of a property of literariness or essence of art, the nature of literature as a unique output of human cognition and the possible distinctiveness of the mind that creates it. In constant dialogue with philosophy, linguistics and the cognitive sciences, this book offers an invaluable new treatment of literature and literary language, and sketches novel directions for literary study in the twenty-first century.
- Accessible to a wide audience across multiple disciplines, with varying degrees of expertise
- Shows how linguistics and cognitive theories can both influence and be influenced by the study of literature and art
- Maps out new directions for literary study in the twenty-first century
Reviews & endorsements
'Probably the best book on literature, language and mind I have ever read. It makes a case for genuinely reciprocal interdisciplinary practices and points the way to epistemologically more robust study in the arts and humanities. It will be hugely influential.' Tim Wharton, University of Brighton
Product details
October 2021Paperback
9781108406291
152 pages
231 × 152 × 9 mm
0.236kg
3 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Prologue
- 1. The question of expressibility or how far it is possible to speak our mind
- 2. Language, world and mind
- 3. The curse of the phenomenal: a case from Kinaesthesia
- 4. After structural essentialism what? Implications for the inadequacy of language thesis
- 5. Literature as artifact v literature as a cognitive object. Implications for linguistic pessimism
- 6. Literature as meaning v literature as experience
- 7. Interdisciplinarity, theory and the sciences of mind
- Afterword.