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Angus Fletcher’s Other Literary Darwinism

  • Joseph Carroll
Published/Copyright: January 12, 2022
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Abstract

Angus Fletcher pitches his book to general readers. Though it consists of literary criticism, it is designed as a psychological self-help manual-literature as therapy. Fletcher's thera­peutic program is presented as an alternative to the kind of literary Darwinism that iden­tifies human nature as the basis for literature. He acknowledges the existence of human nature but aims at transcending it by promoting an Aquarian ethos of harmony and un­derstanding. He has some gifts of style, but the dominant voice in his stylistic blend is that of the shill hawking a patent medicine. He presents himself as a modern sage who reveals an ancient but long-lost technique for using literature to boost happiness and well-being. Each of his 25 chapters identifies a distinct literary technique and uses popularized neuro­science to describe its supposedly beneficial psychological effects. Fletcher’s chains of rea­soning are habitually tenuous, and his exposition is littered with factual errors that betray ignorance of the books, genres, and periods he discusses. Despite its shortcomings, Fletch­er’s book has received encomiums from prestigious researchers, including the psychologist Martin Seligman and the neuroscientist Antonio Damasio. In evaluating Fletcher’s rhetor­ical style, analytic categories, Aquarian ethos, historical self-narrative, pattern of reasoning, and literary scholarship, this review essay reaches a more negative judgment about the value of his book. As an alternative to Fletcher’s book, I recommend a few evolutionary literary works for general readers.

Published Online: 2022-01-12
Published in Print: 2021-12-01

© 2022 by Academic Studies Press

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Titelei
  2. Table of Contents
  3. TARGET ARTICLE
  4. Adaptive Imagination: Toward a Mythopoetic Cognitive Science
  5. RESPONSES TO TARGET ARTICLE
  6. The Problem of Equating Content with Process in the Mythopoetic Model
  7. Mythopoetic Cognition Is a Form of Autobiographical Simulation
  8. Neurocognitive and Evolutionary Perspective on Adaptive Imagination
  9. The Perils of MC, Lost in the Forest of DM
  10. Appetence, Key Stimuli, and Core Affects: Foundational Elements of Human Behavior and Mind
  11. Collective, Joint, and Shared Imagination?
  12. Narrative in Mind
  13. The Importance of Narrative and Intuitive Thought in Navigating Our Realities
  14. Evolution of Imagination: From Completely Involuntary to Fully Voluntary
  15. Asma and Shakespeare on Dual Cognition
  16. REJOINDER
  17. The Strangest Sort of Map: Reply to Commentaries
  18. ARTICLE
  19. Dad Jokes and the Deep Roots of Fatherly Teasing
  20. REVIEW ESSAYS
  21. Angus Fletcher’s Other Literary Darwinism
  22. Homo Paedens? Did Kids Invent the Human Species?
  23. BOOK REVIEWS
  24. Brett Cooke. Tolstoy’s Family Prototypes in War and Peace
  25. Jeremy DeSilva. A Most Interesting Problem: What Darwin’s Descent of Man Got Wrong and Right about Human Evolution
  26. Felipe Fernández-Armesto. Out of Our Minds: What We Think and How We Came to Think It
  27. Paul van Helvert and John van Wyhe. Darwin: A Companion
  28. Jürgen Renn. The Evolution of Knowledge: Rethinking Science for the Anthropocene
  29. ARTICLE REVIEWS
  30. Audiovisual Media
  31. Cultural Theory
  32. Life Narratives
  33. Literature
  34. Evolutionary Perspectives on Music
  35. Paleoaesthetics
  36. Popular Culture
  37. Contributors
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