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Keywords: Mark Haddon
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Empathy and Mind
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Anne Whitehead
Published: 01 November 2017
... of empathy that is located not in the individual subject, but rather in the world that we share. In the final section, ‘Narrating autism’, Mark Haddon’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time is discussed as a ‘syndrome novel’ that can open up reflection on the phenomenological...
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Alterity Is Relative: Impairment, Narrative, and Care in an Age of Neuroscience
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James Berger
Published: 23 May 2014
... of brain processes holds the key to understanding all aspects of human thought, feeling, behavior, and culture. The chapter suggests a “defense of narrative” against methodologies that bypass narrative's and language's intrinsic ambiguities and contingencies. Mark Haddon's The Curious Incident ...
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Pluralities
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Belinda Jack
Published: 18 April 2019
... Mark Haddon James Joyce Ian McEwan Lionel Trilling C7.P1 Many of us, most of us, spend a very large part of our days reading. But what we read is in myriad forms. There is surely an argument for ‘reading’ to become a plural with a new sense—readings. On the face of it, one of the apparently biggest...
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