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Speaking pictures : neuropsychoanalysis and authorship in film and literature / Alistair Fox.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Bloomington : Indiana University Press, 2016Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780253020994
  • 0253020999
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Speaking picturesDDC classification:
  • 808.301/9 23
LOC classification:
  • PN3352.P7 F79 2016eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Introduction -- Changing Configurations in Theories of Fictive Representation -- Why Does Fictive Representation Exist? -- The Wellsprings of Fictive Creativity -- The Materials of Fictive Invention -- The Informing Role of Fantasy -- The Shaping of Fictive Scenarios by the Author: Motivations, Strategies, and Outcomes -- The Exploitation of Generic Templates and Intertexts as Vehicles for Affect Regulation -- Theories of Reception in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries -- A Neuropsychoanalytic Theory of Reception -- Intersubjective Attunement, Filiation, and the Re-creative Process: Jules and Jim- from Henri-Pierre Roche to Francois Truffaut -- The Conversion of Autobiographical Emotion into Symbolic Figuration: William Shakespeare's Hamlet -- Tracking a Personal Myth through an Oeuvre: The Films of Francois Ozon -- Conclusion.
Summary: Alistair Fox presents a theory of literary and cinematic representation through the lens of neurological and cognitive science in order to understand the origins of storytelling and our desire for fictional worlds. Fox contends that fiction is deeply shaped by emotions and the human capacity for metaphorical thought. Literary and moving images bridge emotional response with the cognitive side of the brain. In a radical move to link the neurosciences with psychoanalysis, Fox foregrounds the interpretive experience as a way to reach personal emotional equilibrium by working through autobiographical issues within a fictive form.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- Changing Configurations in Theories of Fictive Representation -- Why Does Fictive Representation Exist? -- The Wellsprings of Fictive Creativity -- The Materials of Fictive Invention -- The Informing Role of Fantasy -- The Shaping of Fictive Scenarios by the Author: Motivations, Strategies, and Outcomes -- The Exploitation of Generic Templates and Intertexts as Vehicles for Affect Regulation -- Theories of Reception in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries -- A Neuropsychoanalytic Theory of Reception -- Intersubjective Attunement, Filiation, and the Re-creative Process: Jules and Jim- from Henri-Pierre Roche to Francois Truffaut -- The Conversion of Autobiographical Emotion into Symbolic Figuration: William Shakespeare's Hamlet -- Tracking a Personal Myth through an Oeuvre: The Films of Francois Ozon -- Conclusion.

Print version record.

Alistair Fox presents a theory of literary and cinematic representation through the lens of neurological and cognitive science in order to understand the origins of storytelling and our desire for fictional worlds. Fox contends that fiction is deeply shaped by emotions and the human capacity for metaphorical thought. Literary and moving images bridge emotional response with the cognitive side of the brain. In a radical move to link the neurosciences with psychoanalysis, Fox foregrounds the interpretive experience as a way to reach personal emotional equilibrium by working through autobiographical issues within a fictive form.

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