Alice Munro’s dementia stories provide narrative tools for illuminating otherwise impenetrable brain territories and for gaining insight into and empathising with mental illness. The protagonists of “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” and of “In Sight of the Lake” set out on a quest for insight, involving readers in the process, who can narratively explore cognitive deterioration from two different perspectives (internal and external). In “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” we can access the ‘Alzheimer’s mind’ from the point of view of Grant, who bears witness to his wife’s illness; in “In Sight of the Lake” readers witness the protagonist’s progressive cognitive decline. The processes of reading and comprehending throw light on the Alzheimer’s...
This essay demonstrates the fruitfulness of applying a lens based on 4E-inspired cognitive narratolo...
Dominant narratives in a hypercognitive Western society invite others to see people with advanced de...
In this thesis I analyze how a neurotypical reader can feel empathetic towards neurodivergent charac...
This essay analyzes two recent stories by Alice Munro, “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” (Hateship, ...
While the stigma for mental illnesses has greatly declined in the last decade, there is still a disc...
La nouvelle “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” d’Alice Munro est une étude sur la douleur, la perte, ...
The emergence of fields of study like emotionology, affective narratology, and psychonarratology in ...
Abstract Alice Munro is a Canadian short story writer and the recipient of many literary honours, in...
The objective of this article is to review extant empirical studies of empathy in narrative reading ...
In folk theories of art reception, readers and cinema audiences are said to experience fictional wor...
Cet article propose une micro-lecture d’une nouvelle de Munro fondée sur l’explicitation de son titr...
The stories of Alice Munro illuminate and enrich both the strange and the familiar. Paradoxes and co...
2013 m. Nobelio literatūros premija skirta Kanados rašytojai Alice Munro (g. 1931). Tai pirmas atvej...
As the population ages and dementia becomes more commonplace, we have seen a corresponding increase...
Stories about dementia have ethical implications. Both cultural and fictional narratives about this ...
This essay demonstrates the fruitfulness of applying a lens based on 4E-inspired cognitive narratolo...
Dominant narratives in a hypercognitive Western society invite others to see people with advanced de...
In this thesis I analyze how a neurotypical reader can feel empathetic towards neurodivergent charac...
This essay analyzes two recent stories by Alice Munro, “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” (Hateship, ...
While the stigma for mental illnesses has greatly declined in the last decade, there is still a disc...
La nouvelle “The Bear Came Over the Mountain” d’Alice Munro est une étude sur la douleur, la perte, ...
The emergence of fields of study like emotionology, affective narratology, and psychonarratology in ...
Abstract Alice Munro is a Canadian short story writer and the recipient of many literary honours, in...
The objective of this article is to review extant empirical studies of empathy in narrative reading ...
In folk theories of art reception, readers and cinema audiences are said to experience fictional wor...
Cet article propose une micro-lecture d’une nouvelle de Munro fondée sur l’explicitation de son titr...
The stories of Alice Munro illuminate and enrich both the strange and the familiar. Paradoxes and co...
2013 m. Nobelio literatūros premija skirta Kanados rašytojai Alice Munro (g. 1931). Tai pirmas atvej...
As the population ages and dementia becomes more commonplace, we have seen a corresponding increase...
Stories about dementia have ethical implications. Both cultural and fictional narratives about this ...
This essay demonstrates the fruitfulness of applying a lens based on 4E-inspired cognitive narratolo...
Dominant narratives in a hypercognitive Western society invite others to see people with advanced de...
In this thesis I analyze how a neurotypical reader can feel empathetic towards neurodivergent charac...