"This innovative history makes it possible to imagine the coming epoch
of holistic multimedia in which analogy plays the role that allegory
played in postmodernism."
-- Gregory L. Ulmer, Professor of English and Media
Studies, University of Florida
Recuperating a topic once central to philosophy, theology, rhetoric,
and aesthetics, this groundbreaking book explores the discovery of
sameness in otherness. Analogy poses an intriguingly ancient and
modern conundrum. How, in the face of cultural diversity, can a unique
someone or something be perceived as like what it is not? This book
is for anyone puzzled by why today, as Barbara Maria Stafford claims,
"we possess no language for talking about resemblance, only an
exaggerated awareness of difference." Well-designed images, Stafford
argues, reveal the mind's intuitive leaps to connect known with
unknown experience.
The first of four wide-ranging chapters paints a challenging overview
of several pressing contemporary issues. Cloning, legal controversies
about social inequity, identity politics, electronic copying, and the
mimicry of virtual reality expose the need for a nuanced theory of
similitude. The second examines the historical tug-of-war between
analogy and allegory, or disanalogy. Stafford provocatively
suggests that, since the Romantic Era, we have been living in
polarizingly allegorical times. The third roots this divisiveness
within the momentous shift from a magical universe, modeled on sexual
bonds, to an engineered world built of discrete automated
units. Finally, recent developments in computational brain research
notwithstanding, major phenomenological questions about memory,
emotion, intelligence, and awareness beckon. In the fourth chapter,
Stafford intervenes in the consciousness debates to propose a
humanistic cognitive science with bridging/analogy at its artful core.
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