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Why We Need a Journal with the Title Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture

  • Joseph Carroll
Published/Copyright: April 1, 2017
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Published Online: 2017-04-01
Published in Print: 2017-04-01

© Academic Studies Press

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Back Matter
  2. Front Matter
  3. INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST ISSUE
  4. Why We Need a Journal with the Title Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture
  5. SPECIAL SECTION: BELIEFS ABOUT HUMAN NATURE, CULTURE, AND SCIENCE
  6. A Cross-Disciplinary Survey of Beliefs about Human Nature, Culture, and Science
  7. Epistemic Territory and Embodied Imagination
  8. Growing Primacy of Human Agency in the Coevolution Process
  9. Human Nature Evolved to Enable Culture
  10. A Cultural Psychological View on Human Culture and Cultural Development
  11. Evolutionary Approaches to Culture in Sociology
  12. Response to the ESIC Questionnaire
  13. Charles Darwin on the Aesthetic Evolution of Man
  14. Gender Identity: Nature and Nurture Working Together
  15. Against Dichotomy
  16. The Best-Loved Story of All Time: Overcoming All Obstacles to Be Reunited, Evoking Kama Muta
  17. Stories of Minds and Bodies: The Role of Evolutionary Perspectives in Understanding Narrative
  18. History from an Evolutionary Perspective
  19. Identity Politics in Science
  20. Human Nature
  21. Cultural Evolution and Gene–Culture Coevolution
  22. Sexual Dials (Not Switches) Theory: An Evolutionary Perspective on Sex and Gender Complexity
  23. ARTICLES
  24. The Bad Breaks of Walter White: An Evolutionary Approach to the Fictional Antihero
  25. Cognitive Evolution and the Transmission of Popular Narratives: A Literature Review and Application to Urban Legends
  26. Kurt Vonnegut's “Homage to Santa Rosalia”: The “Patroness of Evolutionary Studies” and Galapagos
  27. Art in Early Human Evolution: Socially Driven Art Forms versus Material Art
  28. Animal Metaphors Revisited: New Uses of Art, Literature, and Science in an Environmental Studies Course
  29. Poetic Justice and Edith Wharton's “Xingu”: An Evolutionary Psychological Approach
  30. REVIEW ESSAYS
  31. Neuroaesthetics: The State of the Domain in 2017
  32. “It Just Must Be True”: Tomasello on Cognition and Morality
  33. Recent Critiques of Dual Inheritance Theory
  34. BOOK REVIEWS
  35. Antweiler, Christoph. 2016. Our Common Denominator: Human Universals Revisited.
  36. Beecher, Donald, 2016. Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds: Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance.
  37. Carroll, Sean B. 2016. The Serengeti Rules: The Quest to Discover How Life Works and Why It Matters.
  38. Eibl, Karl. 2016. Evolution—Kognition—Dichtung: Zur Anthropologie der Literatur.
  39. Gopnik, Alison. The Gardner and the Carpenter: What the New Science of Child Development Tells Us about the Relationship between Parents and Children.
  40. Hallam, Susan, Ian Cross, and Michael Thaut, eds. 2009. The Oxford Handbook of Music Psychology.
  41. Harari, Yuval Noah. 2015. Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind.
  42. Henrich, Joseph. 2015. The Secret of Our Success: How Culture Is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species, and Making Us Smarter.
  43. Johnson, Dominic. 2016. God Is Watching You: How the Fear of God Makes Us Human.
  44. Kaufman, Scott Barry, and Carolyn Gregoire. 2015. Wired to Create: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Creative Mind.
  45. McConachie, Bruce. 2015. Evolution, Cognition, and Performance.
  46. Parrish, Alex C. 2014. Adaptive Rhetoric: Evolution, Culture and the Art of Persuasion.
  47. Paul, Robert A. 2015. Mixed Messages: Cultural and Genetic Inheritance in the Constitution of Human Society.
  48. Ridley, Rosalind. 2016. Peter Pan and the Mind of J. M. Barrie: An Exploration of Cognition and Consciousness.
  49. Van Schaik, Carel, and Kai Michel. 2016. The Good Book of Human Nature: An Evolutionary Reading of the Bible.
  50. Tague, Gregory F. 2014. Making Mind: Moral Sense and Consciousness in Philosophy, Science, and Literature.
  51. Contributors
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