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This collection comprises essays from various interdisciplinary perspectives - e.g. literary scholarship, intermediality, art history, psychoanalysis, philosophy, and medicine - to analyze and interpret the fictional and non-fictional works by Siri Hustvedt, an author whose reputation and public presence have been growing steadily in the 21st century and who is recognized as one of the most widely read and appreciated contemporary American writers. In her significance and stature as a public intellectual, she is not merely an American writer but a transnational, cosmopolitan author, who develops new forms not only of literary narrative but of interdisciplinary thought and writing, bringing together otherwise separated genres and branches of knowledge in a broad spectrum between literature and philosophy, historiography and art, psychoanalysis and neuroscience, narrative and medicine. The present volume is structured into the parts "Literary Creation and Communication," Psychoanalysis and Philosophy," "Medicine and Narrative," "Vision, Perception, and Power," and "Trauma, Memory, and the Ambiguities of Self" and closes with an interview of Siri Hustvedt by Susanne Becker in which Hustvedt elucidates her personal conception of her own creative processes of writing.
American Literature. --- Contemporary Literature. --- Gegenwartsliteratur/Nordamerika. --- Hustvedt, Siri. --- Interdisciplinary Humanities. --- Siri Hustvedt. --- LITERARY CRITICISM / American / General. --- Hustvedt, Siri --- הוסטוט, סירי --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Intellectual life.
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Between 1990 and 2015, American literature saw the emergence of a new corpus of epilepsy metaphors which tackle the stigma of epilepsy within three areas: society, body, and language. Eleana Vaja introduces concepts such as protometaphors, relational metaphors, epileptic texts, and metastability to categorize and examine these foci further. Applying philosophy as well as "hard sciences" (i.e. mathematics, medicine, physics) to disability studies, her study of selected works by Siri Hustvedt, Thom Jones, Reif Larsen, Dennis Mahagin, Audrey Niffenegger, Rodman Philbrick, and Lauren Slater shows how epilepsy metaphors redefine the notion of the "liminal" and the "normal".
American literature --- English literature --- Agrarians (Group of writers) --- History and criticism. --- American Literature; Conceptual Metaphors; Metastability; Normativity; Siri Hustvedt; Literature; Body; Medicine; American Studies; Disability Studies; Literary Studies --- American Studies. --- Body. --- Conceptual Metaphors. --- Disability Studies. --- Literary Studies. --- Literature. --- Medicine. --- Metastability. --- Normativity. --- Siri Hustvedt.
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