
Published online:
04 March 2015
Published in print:
01 January 2015
Online ISBN:
9780199983377
Print ISBN:
9780199978069
Contents
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Imagery Is Not a Unitary Phenomenon, but There Are Coherent Principles Imagery Is Not a Unitary Phenomenon, but There Are Coherent Principles
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Vivid Imagery and Pleasure Vivid Imagery and Pleasure
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Intense Aesthetic Response: Balancing External and Internal Cognition Intense Aesthetic Response: Balancing External and Internal Cognition
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Why the Neural Networks Matter Why the Neural Networks Matter
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Bidirectionally Focused States Bidirectionally Focused States
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Acknowledgment Acknowledgment
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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Chapter
12 Theorizing Imagery, Aesthetics, and Doubly Directed States
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G. Gabrielle Starr
G. Gabrielle Starr
English, New York University
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Department of English New York University New York, NY
Pages
246–268
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Published:04 March 2015
Cite
Starr, G. Gabrielle, 'Theorizing Imagery, Aesthetics, and Doubly Directed States', in Lisa Zunshine (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Literary Studies (2015; online edn, Oxford Academic, 4 Mar. 2015), https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199978069.013.0013, accessed 8 May 2025.
Abstract
Aesthetic experiences combine a range of kinds of responses, including interpretation, imagination, emotion, evaluation, critique, choices, and even physical action. Using tools of cognitive neuroscience, this chapter focuses on the multiple roles imagery may play in driving aesthetic experience, with a particular emphasis on multimodal or multisensory imagery, individual differences, and the potential role of a variety of neural structures in integrating internal and external perceptions and representations.
Series
Oxford Handbooks
Collection:
Oxford Handbooks Online
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