2019
DOI: 10.2478/gth-2019-0018
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Neurohermeneutics A Transdisciplinary Approach to Literature

Abstract: The study of literature and arts in general has been recently enriched by the changes in the heuristic paradigms regarding the very essence of the cognitive processes implied by the artistic experience. In the frame of the epistemological changes occurred in the past decades, since the so-called "neuro-turn" and the definition of an "epistemology based on the brain" (see Edelman, 2007), the linkage of humanities, cognitive studies and neuroscience has put at stake the need of inquiring about arts and literatur… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Finally, in line with Gambino's and Pulvirenti's (2019) ideas on (neuro)hermeneutics, the concept of the neurohermeneutical circle shall be deployed as a heuristic tool in order to comprehend the dynamics of the translational experience as a complex network of meanings generated by both the author of the source text and by the translator and influencing the (implied) 5 reader's imagination and his/her generalized experience with the text that they are reading. The two worlds, that of the writer and that of the (implied) reader, intertwine to a considerable degree, with particu-lar parts and the whole interconnecting on many levels.…”
Section: Methodological Remarks On Analysing the Source Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Finally, in line with Gambino's and Pulvirenti's (2019) ideas on (neuro)hermeneutics, the concept of the neurohermeneutical circle shall be deployed as a heuristic tool in order to comprehend the dynamics of the translational experience as a complex network of meanings generated by both the author of the source text and by the translator and influencing the (implied) 5 reader's imagination and his/her generalized experience with the text that they are reading. The two worlds, that of the writer and that of the (implied) reader, intertwine to a considerable degree, with particu-lar parts and the whole interconnecting on many levels.…”
Section: Methodological Remarks On Analysing the Source Textmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, though, it is plausible to claim that certain simulations, after all interpreted as specific cognitive processes, despite their strong individuation and differentiation, should also be marked by common features, especially in the case of groups of people sharing cultural and historical background. Gambino and Pulvirenti (2019) refer to this phenomenon in the following way: "The cognitive approach to the text implies that, despite all individual differences, all humans share some basic mental dynamics, which are condensed and abbreviated in the literary text; the author's view of the world can therefore be represented in the text and refeatured by the reader, by virtue of these shared mental dynamics" (195). According to this view, trigger-scenes lead to culture-specific imageries which are similar in individuals because of common denominators entrenched in a given society.…”
Section: Landscape and Embodimentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Analysing these distributions, it is possible to assess which mental processese.g. imagination and imaging (Magyari et al, 2020), strong affective emotional response (Lüdtke et al, 2014), or personal resonance (Jacobs, 2016;Larsen and Seilman, 1988) are prompted in association with which (clustering of) foregrounding features (Gambino and Pulvirenti, 2019). Hence, it can be assumed that poems with different foregrounding potential will prompt different types of affective and aesthetic responses.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, a foregrounding analysis should be able to assess the potential impact of foregrounding elements that are intertwined and distributed across multiple lines of a poem. The Foregrounding Assessment Matrix (FAM; Gambino and Pulvirenti, 2018, 2019; Gambino et al, 2020) is especially developed to address this challenge. Theoretically, the FAM is based on a combination of classic structuralist theory (Jakobson and Lévi-Strauss, 1962; Lotman, 1977), foregrounding theory as developed in empirical studies of literature (Miall and Kuiken, 1994, 1998; Van Peer, 1986; Van Peer and Chesnokova, 2020) and more recent approaches in the field of (neuro)cognitive poetics (Burke and Troscianko, 2017; Carroll, 2012; Hogan, 2003; Jacobs, 2015a; Nicklas and Jacobs, 2017; Schrott and Jacobs, 2011; Steen, 2004; Stockwell, 2009a, 2009b; Willems and Jacobs, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%