The peer-reviewed journal of Generative Anthropology, founded by Eric Gans at UCLA. Published 1995–2024 (Vols 1–30), featuring essays by Van Oort, Bartlett, Dennis, Ludwigs, McKenna, Goldman, Eshelman, Gans, Girard, and others.
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About Our Contributors Bjorn Beijnon is a lecturer at the Department of Media and Culture Studies, Utrecht University, the Netherlands. His interests lie in the embodied human perception of media and...
This is a guest issue of Anthropoetics guest-edited by Marina Ludwigs and Elisabet Dellming, both of Stockholm University. This installment is dedicated to the 11 th Annual Generative Anthropology...
Department of Media and Culture Studies Utrecht University Utrecht, the Netherlands b.beijnon@uu.nl KEYWORDS Enactive Perception; Cognition; Jean-Louis Baudry; Film Theory; Ideology; Close Reading...
Department of English Stockholm University Universitetsvägen 10, 114 18 Stockholm, Sweden elisabet.dellming@english.su.se While it is hardly surprising that Penelope Fitzgerald’s novel about Novalis...
English Department University of Ottawa Ottawa, ON Canada, K1N 6N5 idennis@uottawa.ca An Age of Song The 2016 Nobel Prize for Literature was awarded to Bob Dylan, but for many commentators the choice...
Department of English Stockholm University Universitetsvägen 10, 114 18 Stockholm, Sweden giles . whiteley @english.su.se The discipline of literary criticism is built, in part, on a network of...
Department of English Stockholm University Universitetsvägen 10, 114 18 Stockholm, Sweden joakim.wrethed@english.su.se Tom McCarthy’s novel Remainder has attracted a great deal of academic...
This paper will investigate connections amongst Eric Gans’s theory of Generative Anthropology (GA), cognitive studies (most of all in the area of cognitive anthropology) and the Hindu mythological...
Peter Goldman is Professor of English at Westminster College in Salt Lake City. He is also President of the Generative Anthropology Society & Conference (GASC). Peter teaches classes and has...
Paradise Lost &rft.source=Anthropoetics&rft.date=2018-04-09&rft.identifier=http://anthropoetics.ucla.edu/?p=3617&rft.language=English&rft.subject=Anthropoetics XXIII&rft.subject=no. 2 Spring...
The liberal world order presents itself as a vast mapping of “rights.” No political or social question can be discussed without being framed in terms of “rights”—someone’s rights being violated, or...
Today Paul de Man’s name is not heard as often as before in academic discourse. Although he has not fallen into oblivion—there was, for example, a biography of him published several years ago—his...