In his article Frame, Preference, and Memory in Literary History Narration Guoqiang Qiao analyzes the frame, preference and memory in literary historiography from a narratological and cognitive perspectives. He maintains that literary history is of multileveled narration that includes not only the perceptualized literary events, literary figures, and literary works, but also the conceptualized spirit of the time, national culture, and personal and collective memories. Qiao employs the basic concepts of frame, preference, and memory to suggest a cognitive approach to the narration of literary history. To illustrate the complex construction of literary historiography, he provides examples from Chinese literary history
In his article The Reception of Mao\u27s \u27Talks at the Yan\u27an Forum on Literature and Art\u27...
Speculative realism has, over the course of its rapid and controversial emergence in the past decade...
This article suggests that narrative studies would benefit from (hermeneutically informed) philosoph...
While literary theory in general is not employed by historians to any great extent, cognitive narrat...
Cognition, Literature, and History models the ways in which cognitive and literary studies may colla...
In his article Reception and Variations of Classical Narratology in Chinese Scholarship Biwu Shang...
This paper reviews some key issues in the current study of cognitive poetics. It first explores the ...
In his article The Maze of Shanghai Memory in Kazuo Ishiguro\u27s When We Were Orphans Biwu Shang ...
How do narratives draw on our memory capacity? How is our attention guided when we are reading a lit...
The Oxford handbook of cognitive literary studies' applies developments in cognitive science to a wi...
"How do narratives draw on our memory capacity? How is our attention guided when we are reading a li...
Humans perceive and conceptualize who we are by making a consistent and coherent story of the past. ...
This is a study on the nature of narrative in light of a narratological theory inspired by a compari...
In his article Reinterpreting History and Gujin\u27s (古今) Cultural Practices, Chao Liu analyzes th...
In Shi ji studies, scholars from both the East and West have predominantly taken one particular appr...
In his article The Reception of Mao\u27s \u27Talks at the Yan\u27an Forum on Literature and Art\u27...
Speculative realism has, over the course of its rapid and controversial emergence in the past decade...
This article suggests that narrative studies would benefit from (hermeneutically informed) philosoph...
While literary theory in general is not employed by historians to any great extent, cognitive narrat...
Cognition, Literature, and History models the ways in which cognitive and literary studies may colla...
In his article Reception and Variations of Classical Narratology in Chinese Scholarship Biwu Shang...
This paper reviews some key issues in the current study of cognitive poetics. It first explores the ...
In his article The Maze of Shanghai Memory in Kazuo Ishiguro\u27s When We Were Orphans Biwu Shang ...
How do narratives draw on our memory capacity? How is our attention guided when we are reading a lit...
The Oxford handbook of cognitive literary studies' applies developments in cognitive science to a wi...
"How do narratives draw on our memory capacity? How is our attention guided when we are reading a li...
Humans perceive and conceptualize who we are by making a consistent and coherent story of the past. ...
This is a study on the nature of narrative in light of a narratological theory inspired by a compari...
In his article Reinterpreting History and Gujin\u27s (古今) Cultural Practices, Chao Liu analyzes th...
In Shi ji studies, scholars from both the East and West have predominantly taken one particular appr...
In his article The Reception of Mao\u27s \u27Talks at the Yan\u27an Forum on Literature and Art\u27...
Speculative realism has, over the course of its rapid and controversial emergence in the past decade...
This article suggests that narrative studies would benefit from (hermeneutically informed) philosoph...