Год выпуска: 1996 Автор: Mark Turner Издательство: Oxford University Press Страниц: 200 ISBN: 0195104110
Описание
Turner, a professor of English with a passion for cognitive studies, proposes new and intriguing interpretations of the workings of the mind and the evolution of language and grammar. "The literary mind is the fundamental mind," he states, then launches into a complex explanation of how thoughts take the form of stories, or parables, and how parables are the vehicle for comprehension and organization of experiences. Turner illustrates his definition of the parable--stories with an associative purpose--as the most basic habit of mind in discussions of the tales of Shahrazad and the novels of Proust, but he also dissects such subtle properties of parable as its illumination of space and time. He concludes by rejecting the notion of grammar's being inherent in the genetic code, as theorized by Noam Chomsky, and declares, instead, that parable is the wellspring of grammar. Recommended where literary theory has an audience. Donna Seaman
Добрый день Юлия. Я консультацию получила, спасибо большое (мне работа после вашего сопровождения очень понравилась, вы гений :) ) Напишу вам результат после проверки ее моим руководителем. Спасибо.