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Mind, body, and emotion in the recep...
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Hautsch, Jessica.
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Mind, body, and emotion in the reception and creation practices of fan communities = thinking through feels /
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Mind, body, and emotion in the reception and creation practices of fan communities/ by Jessica Hautsch.
Reminder of title:
thinking through feels /
Author:
Hautsch, Jessica.
Published:
Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland : : 2023.,
Description:
xiii, 224 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm.
[NT 15003449]:
1 Introduction: Body, Feeling, Community, and Cognition -- Rewriting Stories and Bad Readers -- 4 -E Cognition -- Cognitive Linguistics -- Emotions -- Embodied Cognition -- Extended and Distributed Cognition -- Critical Closeness -- A Note on Methodology -- Chapter Overview -- References -- 2 Catching Feels: Fan Feelings, Bodies, and Communities -- Fan Feelings -- Conceptualizing Feels -- Metaphors We Feel By -- Conclusion: You, Me, Fandom, and Feels -- References -- 3 Living through Gifs: Embodied Cognition and Emotion -- An Embodied Understanding of Gifs -- A Feeling of Community -- The Bodies that Launched a Thousand Ships -- Conclusion: Casting Bodies -- References -- 4 Actors, Characters, and Blending -- Conceptual Blending Theory and Compression -- Bodies That Matter -- Haunting Bodies across AUs -- Conclusion: Communal Contexts -- References -- 5 Reframing Vids -- Communal Ways of Thinking -- Blending Stories -- Embodied and Embedded Rehearsal -- Cutting Together Crossovers -- Conclusion: Performing Community -- References -- 6 Casting, Counterfactuals, and the Communal Construction of Characters -- Knowing Characters through Conceptual Blending -- Casting AU Fics -- Thinking through Stories -- Conclusion: Cognitive Flexibility -- References -- 7 Epilogue -- References.
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Fans (Persons) - Social networks. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32450-5
ISBN:
9783031324505
Mind, body, and emotion in the reception and creation practices of fan communities = thinking through feels /
Hautsch, Jessica.
Mind, body, and emotion in the reception and creation practices of fan communities
thinking through feels /[electronic resource] :by Jessica Hautsch. - Cham :Springer Nature Switzerland :2023. - xiii, 224 p. :ill., digital ;24 cm. - Palgrave fan studies,2662-2815. - Palgrave fan studies..
1 Introduction: Body, Feeling, Community, and Cognition -- Rewriting Stories and Bad Readers -- 4 -E Cognition -- Cognitive Linguistics -- Emotions -- Embodied Cognition -- Extended and Distributed Cognition -- Critical Closeness -- A Note on Methodology -- Chapter Overview -- References -- 2 Catching Feels: Fan Feelings, Bodies, and Communities -- Fan Feelings -- Conceptualizing Feels -- Metaphors We Feel By -- Conclusion: You, Me, Fandom, and Feels -- References -- 3 Living through Gifs: Embodied Cognition and Emotion -- An Embodied Understanding of Gifs -- A Feeling of Community -- The Bodies that Launched a Thousand Ships -- Conclusion: Casting Bodies -- References -- 4 Actors, Characters, and Blending -- Conceptual Blending Theory and Compression -- Bodies That Matter -- Haunting Bodies across AUs -- Conclusion: Communal Contexts -- References -- 5 Reframing Vids -- Communal Ways of Thinking -- Blending Stories -- Embodied and Embedded Rehearsal -- Cutting Together Crossovers -- Conclusion: Performing Community -- References -- 6 Casting, Counterfactuals, and the Communal Construction of Characters -- Knowing Characters through Conceptual Blending -- Casting AU Fics -- Thinking through Stories -- Conclusion: Cognitive Flexibility -- References -- 7 Epilogue -- References.
"Hautsch's book is a game-changer: her central idea of "critical closeness" ("a mode of reading and response that is deeply emotional, embodied, and communal") unites many previous strands of fan studies and, in its clear opposition to (male, white) literary-critical ideas of "critical distance," opens up new ways not only to think about fan works but about art in general. Drawing on cognitive psychology and performance studies, Mind, Body, and Emotion in the Reception and Creation Practices of Fan Communities unites two historically different theories of fanworks: one which sees them as a site of emotion and community, and one which sees them as critical responses to media culture. Hautsch undoes these facile oppositions and puts thinking back into the body, connecting fandom's emotional and analytical responses." -Francesca Coppa, Professor of English and Film Studies, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA, USA This book argues that fans' creative works form a cognitive system; fanfic, fanvids, and gifs are not simply evidence of thinking, but acts of thinking. Drawing on work in cognitive linguistics, neuroscience, cognitive philosophy, and psychology-particularly focused on 4-E cognition, which rejects Cartesian dualism-this project demonstrates that cognition is an embodied, emotional, and distributed act that emerges from fans' interactions with media texts, technological interfaces, and fan collectives. This mode of textual engagement is deeply physical, emotional, and social and is enacted through fanworks. By developing a theory of critical closeness, this book proposes a methodology for fruitfully putting cognitive science in conversation with fan studies. Jessica Hautsch is an assistant professor in the Humanities Department at New York Institute of Technology. She earned her PhD from Stony Brook University, where she also taught as a lecturer with the Program in Writing and Rhetoric. Her work offers a phenomenological interrogation of fan communities, exploring how the cognitive humanities, performance studies, and fandom intersect. She is an avid fan of Buffy, Game of Thrones, D&D, and emo.
ISBN: 9783031324505
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-32450-5doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
3663732
Fans (Persons)
--Social networks.
LC Class. No.: HM646 / .H38 2023
Dewey Class. No.: 302.33
Mind, body, and emotion in the reception and creation practices of fan communities = thinking through feels /
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1 Introduction: Body, Feeling, Community, and Cognition -- Rewriting Stories and Bad Readers -- 4 -E Cognition -- Cognitive Linguistics -- Emotions -- Embodied Cognition -- Extended and Distributed Cognition -- Critical Closeness -- A Note on Methodology -- Chapter Overview -- References -- 2 Catching Feels: Fan Feelings, Bodies, and Communities -- Fan Feelings -- Conceptualizing Feels -- Metaphors We Feel By -- Conclusion: You, Me, Fandom, and Feels -- References -- 3 Living through Gifs: Embodied Cognition and Emotion -- An Embodied Understanding of Gifs -- A Feeling of Community -- The Bodies that Launched a Thousand Ships -- Conclusion: Casting Bodies -- References -- 4 Actors, Characters, and Blending -- Conceptual Blending Theory and Compression -- Bodies That Matter -- Haunting Bodies across AUs -- Conclusion: Communal Contexts -- References -- 5 Reframing Vids -- Communal Ways of Thinking -- Blending Stories -- Embodied and Embedded Rehearsal -- Cutting Together Crossovers -- Conclusion: Performing Community -- References -- 6 Casting, Counterfactuals, and the Communal Construction of Characters -- Knowing Characters through Conceptual Blending -- Casting AU Fics -- Thinking through Stories -- Conclusion: Cognitive Flexibility -- References -- 7 Epilogue -- References.
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"Hautsch's book is a game-changer: her central idea of "critical closeness" ("a mode of reading and response that is deeply emotional, embodied, and communal") unites many previous strands of fan studies and, in its clear opposition to (male, white) literary-critical ideas of "critical distance," opens up new ways not only to think about fan works but about art in general. Drawing on cognitive psychology and performance studies, Mind, Body, and Emotion in the Reception and Creation Practices of Fan Communities unites two historically different theories of fanworks: one which sees them as a site of emotion and community, and one which sees them as critical responses to media culture. Hautsch undoes these facile oppositions and puts thinking back into the body, connecting fandom's emotional and analytical responses." -Francesca Coppa, Professor of English and Film Studies, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA, USA This book argues that fans' creative works form a cognitive system; fanfic, fanvids, and gifs are not simply evidence of thinking, but acts of thinking. Drawing on work in cognitive linguistics, neuroscience, cognitive philosophy, and psychology-particularly focused on 4-E cognition, which rejects Cartesian dualism-this project demonstrates that cognition is an embodied, emotional, and distributed act that emerges from fans' interactions with media texts, technological interfaces, and fan collectives. This mode of textual engagement is deeply physical, emotional, and social and is enacted through fanworks. By developing a theory of critical closeness, this book proposes a methodology for fruitfully putting cognitive science in conversation with fan studies. Jessica Hautsch is an assistant professor in the Humanities Department at New York Institute of Technology. She earned her PhD from Stony Brook University, where she also taught as a lecturer with the Program in Writing and Rhetoric. Her work offers a phenomenological interrogation of fan communities, exploring how the cognitive humanities, performance studies, and fandom intersect. She is an avid fan of Buffy, Game of Thrones, D&D, and emo.
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Literature, Cultural and Media Studies (SpringerNature-41173)
based on 0 review(s)
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W9459376
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11.線上閱覽_V
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EB HM646 .H38 2023
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