Aesthetics and ideology in Felicia Hemans's the Forest Sanctuary: a biocultural perspective.(Critical essay): An article from: Style
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Aesthetics and ideology in Felicia Hemans's the Forest Sanctuary: a biocultural perspective.(Critical essay): An article from: Style
This digital document is an article from Style, published by Northern Illinois University on September 22, 2012. The length of the article is 7280 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
From the author: This essay suggests that a biocultural model of the mind can explain some aspects of literary aesthetics and its relationship to ideology. Drawing on environmental psychology, neuroscience, developmental psychology, and related fields, Easterlin proposes that the orientation of humans as wayfinders predisposes them to attend especially to novelty or rarity in the environment. Moreover, this pronounced interest in the novel or unusual carries over from actual environments into reader processing of textual environments. When literary environments largely fail to offer novelty, as is the case in Felicia Hemans's The Forest Sanctuary, they forestall the cognitive-affective meaning-making process that forms the core of literary experience. As the reading demonstrates, Hemans's poem only solicits such engagement when the poem is controlled by Protestant ideology. The early nineteenth-century dictate that women write sentimental and conventional poetry, then, prescribes a form of composition opposed to built-in aesthetic preferences.
Citation Details
Title: Aesthetics and ideology in Felicia Hemans's the Forest Sanctuary: a biocultural perspective.(Critical essay)
Author: Nancy Easterlin
Publication: Style (Magazine/Journal)
Date: September 22, 2012
Publisher: Northern Illinois University
Volume: 46 Issue: 3-4 Page: 461(19)
Article Type: Critical essay
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