I. A. Richards and the Rise of Cognitive Stylistics (Advances in Stylistics)

I. A. Richards and the Rise of Cognitive Stylistics (Advances in Stylistics)

by David West (Author)

Synopsis

I. A. Richards is an influential figure in literary criticism but has rarely been thought of as someone who laid the foundations for cognitive stylistics. This book proposes that Richards was a protocognitivist . West argues that Richards anticipated many of the discipline's core aims, methods and assumptions. The book argues that the roots of cognitive psychology lie in early 20th-century psychology, when there was a focus on cognitive processes such as memory and learning, attention, categorisation, perception and consciousness. It was this cognitive psychology that Richards drew upon to build a theory of literature and interpretation - which in itself prefigured cognitive stylistics. West also suggests that Richards is one of the more influential British intellectuals of the 20th century, and that his work is still relevant today. West argues that cognitive stylistics is not, as Peter Stockwell has written, a new science of literature and reading , but rather a discipline with a history that it continues to deny itself. This book will appeal to researchers and advanced students in stylistics and literary studies.

$46.56

Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 154
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Published: 26 Jun 2014

ISBN 10: 147257575X
ISBN 13: 9781472575753
Book Overview: Brings into view a sense of history that cognitive stylistics often denies itself.

Media Reviews
Do you think you know who I. A. Richards is and what he stood for? Unless you have already read [this book], think again! ... West's style throughout is lucid and accessible ... [leaving] the reader well equipped to re-engage with Richards' ideas ... This book has a lot to offer anyone interested in understanding Richards' work, and is essential reading for cognitive stylisticians. * Language and Literature *
Brilliant, brilliant, brilliant. This is a convincing revaluation of Richards' significance; it is a perfect example of the rational cognitive turn in the arts; and it is an unanswerable polemic for a science of literary study. -- Professor Peter Stockwell, Chair in Literary Linguistics, University of Nottingham, UK
Author Bio
David West is a Lecturer in English Language, Linguistics and Literature at the University of Munster, Germany.