Associationism and the Literary Imagination

From the Phantasmal Chaos

Cairns Craig

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Associationism and the Literary Imagination traces the influence of empirical philosophy and associationist psychology on theories of literary creativity and on the experience of reading literature. It runs from David Hume's Treatise of Human Nature in 1739 to the works of major literary critics of the twentieth century, such as I.A. Richards, W.K. Wimsatt and Northrop Frye.

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Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction: A Chain of Associations
1 'Kant has not answered Hume': Hume, Coleridge and the Romantic Imagination
2 Signs of Mind and the Return of the Native: Wordsworth to Yeats
3 Strange Attractors and the Conversible World: Hume, Sterne, Dickens
4 The Mythic Method and the Foundations of Modern Literary Criticism
5 Chaos and Conversation: Pater, Joyce, Woolf
6 The Lyrical Epic and the Singularity of Literature
Bibliography
Index.
Cairns Craig is Professor Emeritus in Irish and Scottish Studies at the University of Aberdeen. His most recent books are The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture, Independence (2018) and Muriel Spark, Existentialism and the Art of Death (2019), both published by Edinburgh University Press. He was the general editor of the four volume History of Scottish Literature published by Aberdeen University Press in 1987, and was involved in editing the magazines Cencrastus and Radical Scotland in the 1980s. Other books on Scottish subjects include The Modern Scottish Novel (1999) and Intending Scotland (2009).

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