Cognitive Fictions: The Evolution of Identity in Late-Nineteenth Century Fiction and Science
Carluccio, Dana Marie
This item is only available for download by members of the University of Illinois community. Students, faculty, and staff at the U of I may log in with your NetID and password to view the item. If you are trying to access an Illinois-restricted dissertation or thesis, you can request a copy through your library's Inter-Library Loan office or purchase a copy directly from ProQuest.
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/2142/81449
Description
Title
Cognitive Fictions: The Evolution of Identity in Late-Nineteenth Century Fiction and Science
Author(s)
Carluccio, Dana Marie
Issue Date
2008
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Somerville, Siobhan
Department of Study
English
Discipline
English
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Literature, American
Language
eng
Abstract
"This project claims the term ""cognitive fictions"" to describe an overlooked epistemology of race and gender in the late-19 th and early-20th century U.S., one that challenges inherited assumptions about the relationships among aesthetics, science, and embodied identity. Histories of turn-of-the-twentieth century U.S. culture commonly depict a shift from interiorizing to social models of identity: writers first rushed to re-articulate old racial and gender essentialisms in new Darwinian vocabularies of biological competition (as Nancy Leys Stepan and Marlon B. Ross have shown), only then to discover new 20th-century metaphors in such fields as pragmatism and cultural anthropology (as Sami Ludwig and George Hutchinson have demonstrated). During the 1880s and 90s, however, a group of diverse American writers had begun to re-conceptualize embodied identity in ways that displaced this dichotomy. These writers became cognitive in two ways: they deliberately staged narrative experiments in the relationship of knowledge to identity, and through those experiments they hypothesized that racial and sexual identity might be hard-wired acts of mind, ineluctable ways of seeing the world rather than accurate ways of classifying the world's inhabitants. This project centers on these writers' narrative experiments, arguing that they reformulated a set of concepts that have become cornerstones of contemporary scientific and cultural studies of identity: concepts of intention, perception, function, and orientation. These reformulations eventually found an institutional home in the burgeoning disciplinary field and cultural notion of evolutionary psychology, so that excavating this turn-of-the-century model allows us not only to recognize that essentialist thinking has evolved beyond stability and fixity, but also to appreciate the inter-disciplinary and popular nature of that evolution."
Use this login method if you
don't
have an
@illinois.edu
email address.
(Oops, I do have one)
IDEALS migrated to a new platform on June 23, 2022. If you created
your account prior to this date, you will have to reset your password
using the forgot-password link below.