The Routledge handbook of classics and cognitive theory / edited by Peter Meineck, William Michael Short and Jennifer Devereaux.

The Routledge Handbook of Classics and Cognitive Theory is an interdisciplinary volume that examines the application of cognitive theory to the study of the classical world, across several interrelated areas including linguistics, literary theory, social practices, performance, artificial intelligen...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Devereaux, Jennifer (Editor), Meineck, Peter, 1967- (Editor), Short, William Michael, 1977- (Editor)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2019.
Series:Routledge handbooks.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction / Peter Meineck, William Michael Short & Jennifer J. Devereaux
  • Part I: Cognitive Linguistics
  • 1. Cognitive-Functional Grammar and the Complexity of Early Greek Epic Diction / Ahuvia Kahane
  • 2. The Cognitive Linguistics of Homeric Surprise / Alexander S. W. Forte
  • 3. Construal and Immersion: a Cognitive Linguistic Approach to Homeric Immersivity / Rutger J. Allen
  • 4. Roman Cultural Semantics / William Michael Short
  • 5. Psycholinguistics and the Classical Languages / Alessandro Vatri
  • Part II: Cognitive Literary Theory
  • 6. The Cognition of Deception: Falsehoods in Homer's Odyssey and their Audiences / Elizabeth Minchin
  • 7. The Forbidden Fruit of Compression in Homer / Anna Bonifazi
  • 8. Human Cognition and Narrative Closure: The Odyssey's Open-End / Joel Christensen
  • 9. "I'll imitate Helen"! Troubling Text-worlds and Schemas in Aristophanes' Thesmophoriazusae / Antonis Tsakmakis
  • 10. The Body-as-Metaphor in Latin Literature / Jennifer J. Devereaux
  • Part III: Social Cognition
  • 11. Group Identity and Archaic Lyric: We-Group and Out-Group in Alcaeus 129 / Jessica Romney
  • 12. Plato's Dialogically Extended Cognition: Cognitive Transformation as Elenctic Catharsis / Laura Candiotto
  • 13. Cognitive Dissonance, Defeat, and the Divinization of Demetrius Poliorcetes in Early Hellenistic Athens / Thomas R. Martin
  • 14. Irony in Theory and Practice. The Test Case of Cicero's Philippics / Luca Grillo
  • 15. Roman Ritual Orthopraxy and Overimitation / Jacob L. Mackey
  • 16. Theory of Mind from Athens to Augustine: Divine Omniscience and the Fear of God / Paul C. Dilley
  • Part IV: Performance and Cognition
  • 17. Sappho's Kinesthetic Turn: Agency and Embodiment in Archaic Greek Poetry / Sarah Olsen
  • 18. What Do We Actually See On Stage? A Cognitive Approach to the Interactions Between Visual and Aural Effects in the Performance of Greek Tragedy / Anne-Sophie Noel
  • 19. Mirth and Creative Cognition in the Spectating of Aristophanic Comedy / Angeliki Varakis-Martin
  • Part V: Artificial Intelligence
  • 20. The Extended Mind of Hephaestus: Automata and Artificial Intelligence in Early Greek Hexameter, Amy Lather
  • 21. Staging Artificial Intelligence: The Case of Greek Drama / Maria Gerolemou
  • Part VI: Cognitive Archaeology
  • 22. Thinking with Statues: The Roman Public Portrait and the Cognition of Commemoration / Diana Y. Ng
  • 23. Animal Sacrifices in Roman Asia Minor and its Depictions: A Cognitive Approach / Günter Schörner
  • 24. Art, Architecture, and False Memory in the Roman Empire: A Cognitive Perspective / Maggie L. Popkin.