Shakespeare's Webs: Networks of Meaning in Renaissance DramaRoutledge, 6. 12. 2012. - 192 страница In this book, renowned Renaissance drama critic Arthur F. Kinney argues that Shakespeare's method of composing plays through networks of meanings can be seen as a harbinger of today's information technology. Drawing upon hypertext and cognitive theory--areas that have for some time promised to take on more importance in the sphere of Shakespeare Studies--as well as the central metaphor of the Routledge collection The Renaissance Computer, Kinney looks in detail at four objects/images in Shakespeare's plays--mirrors, maps, clocks, and books--and explores the ways in which they make up networks of meaning within single plays and across the dramatist's body of work that anticipate in some ways the networks of meaning or "information" now possible in the computer age. |
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Страница viii
... observation that because the concepts of the brain are grounded in the sensorimotor system, both body and mind work together.2 (It was Descartes' fundamental error, Antonio Damasio has famously argued, that ever mistakenly separated ...
... observation that because the concepts of the brain are grounded in the sensorimotor system, both body and mind work together.2 (It was Descartes' fundamental error, Antonio Damasio has famously argued, that ever mistakenly separated ...
Страница ix
... observation that “[c]ognitive linguists have traced a number of ways in which word meanings are based on complex domains of cultural knowledge and are extended beyond their original reference through metaphor and metonymy to form ...
... observation that “[c]ognitive linguists have traced a number of ways in which word meanings are based on complex domains of cultural knowledge and are extended beyond their original reference through metaphor and metonymy to form ...
Страница xiii
... of books, all pressures past, That youth and observation copied.... Within the book and volume of my brain [remain] Unmixed with baser matter” (1.5.100–04). Meaning escapes him, as well as understanding. Religion of xiii.
... of books, all pressures past, That youth and observation copied.... Within the book and volume of my brain [remain] Unmixed with baser matter” (1.5.100–04). Meaning escapes him, as well as understanding. Religion of xiii.
Страница xiv
... observation and his thought fail him at this juncture to make meaning, to cohere conceptually. Such conscious ... observations or aphorisms set down in the notebook in one's hand, mind, or memory, but only by making patterns of such ...
... observation and his thought fail him at this juncture to make meaning, to cohere conceptually. Such conscious ... observations or aphorisms set down in the notebook in one's hand, mind, or memory, but only by making patterns of such ...
Страница xvii
... observation and experience in the natural and social worlds outside the brain that first stimulate its cells. “What neurology tells us,” according to David Kirshner and James A. Whitsun, “is that cognition occurs as patterns of ...
... observation and experience in the natural and social worlds outside the brain that first stimulate its cells. “What neurology tells us,” according to David Kirshner and James A. Whitsun, “is that cognition occurs as patterns of ...
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