Tag: Imaginary

Chaos and Cosmos The Imaginary and the Political in Jorge Luis Borges


Free Download Chaos and Cosmos: The Imaginary and the Political in Jorge Luis Borges (Social Imaginaries) by Martín Description
English | July 11, 2024 | ISBN: 1538178672 | True EPUB | 252 pages | 0.6 MB
Chaos and Cosmos offers a new and unique interpretation of Argentine essayist and fiction writer Jorge Luis Borges as a thinker of what continental twentieth century political theory called the political. While not a political writer in the traditional sense, Borges was indeed an author whose response to the advent of totalitarianism, in particular in its Nazi form, generated the most experimental, insightful, and rigorous short fiction and non-fiction political interrogation.

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The Imaginary of Animals


Free Download Annabelle Dufourcq, "The Imaginary of Animals "
English | ISBN: 0367772981 | 2023 | 272 pages | EPUB | 1076 KB
This book explores the phenomenon of animal imagination and its profound power over the human imagination. It examines the structural and ethical role that the human imagination must play to provide an interface between humans’ subjectivity and the real cognitive capacities of animals.

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Monstrous Fantasies England’s Crusading Imaginary and the Romance of Recovery, 1300-1500 (EPUB)


Free Download Monstrous Fantasies: England’s Crusading Imaginary and the Romance of Recovery, 1300-1500 by Leila K. Norako
English | August 15, 2024 | ISBN: 1501776312 | True EPUB | 342 pages | 4.6 MB
Monstrous Fantasies asks why medieval romances reimagining the crusades ending in a Christian victory circulated in England with such abundance after the 1291 Muslim reconquest of Acre, the last of the Latin crusader states in the Holy Land, and what these texts reveal about the cultural anxieties of late medieval England. Leila K. Norako highlights the impact that the Ottoman victory and subsequent massacre of Christian prisoners at the battle of Nicopolis in 1396 had on intensifying the popularity of what she calls recovery romance.

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Did Everyone Have an Imaginary Friend (or Just Me) Adventures in Boyhood [Audiobook]


Free Download Did Everyone Have an Imaginary Friend (or Just Me)?: Adventures in Boyhood (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0CMPLRG8Q | 2024 | 7 hours and 25 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 214 MB
Author: Jay Ellis
Narrator: Jay Ellis

Jay Ellis, star of HBO’s Insecure, tells the story of growing up with an imaginary best friend you will never forget-part Dwayne Wayne from A Different World, part Will Smith from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air-in this hilarious, vulnerable memoir. What to do when you’re the perpetual new kid, only child, and military brat hustling school to school each year and everyone’s looking to you for answers? Make some shit up, of course! And a young Jay Ellis does just that, with help from his imaginary friend, Mikey. A testament to the importance of invention, trusting oneself, and making space for creativity, Did Everyone Have an Imaginary Friend (or Just Me)? is a memoir of a kid who confided in his imaginary sidekick to navigate parallel pop culture universes (like watching Fresh Prince alongside John Hughes movies or listening to Ja Rule and Dave Matthews) to a lifetime of birthday disappointment (being a Christmas-season Capricorn will do that to you) and hoop dreams gone bad. Mikey also guides Ellis through tragedies, like losing his teenage cousin in a mistaken-target drive-by and the shame and fear of being pulled over by cops almost a dozen times the year he got his driver’s license. As his imaginary friend morphs into adult consciousness, Ellis charts an unforgettable story of looking inward to solve to some of life’s biggest (and smallest) challenges, told in the roast-you-with-love voice of your closest homey.

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Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance


Free Download Donald Beecher, "Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds: Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance"
English | ISBN: 0773546804 | 2016 | 496 pages | PDF | 14 MB
In Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds, Donald Beecher explores the characteristics and idiosyncrasies of the brain as they affect the study of fiction. He builds upon insights from the cognitive sciences to explain how we actualize imaginary persons, read the clues to their intentional states, assess their representations of selfhood, and empathize with their felt experiences in imaginary environments. He considers how our own faculty of memory, in all its selective particularity and planned oblivion, becomes an increasingly significant dimension of the critical act, and how our own emotions become aggressive readers of literary experience, culminating in states which define the genres of literature. Beecher illustrates his points with examples from major works of the Renaissance period, including Dr Faustus, The Faerie Queene, Measure for Measure, The Yorkshire Tragedy, Menaphon, The Dialogue of Solomon and Marcolphus, and The Moral Philosophy of Doni. In this volume, studies in the science of mind come into their own in explaining the architectures of the brain that shape such emergent properties as empathy, suspense, curiosity, the formation of communities, gossip, rationalization, confabulation, and so much more that pertains to the behaviour of characters, the orientation of readers, and the construction of meaning. Discussing a breadth of topics ? from the mysteries of the criminal mind to the psychology of tears ? Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds is the most comprehensive work available on the study of fictional worlds and their relation to the constitution of the human brain.

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