The American Art of Memory: Idealism and the Romantic Constitution of Cognitive Interiority

Abstract This article provides a genealogy of the architectural figuration of human cognition from the ancient world to Renaissance Europe and, finally, to the American Renaissance where it came to possess a striking cultural and literary potency. The first section pursues the two-fold task of eluci...

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Autore principale: Corrigan, John Michael (Autore)
Tipo di documento: Elettronico Articolo
Lingua:Inglese
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Pubblicazione: Brill 2021
In: Religion and the arts
Anno: 2021, Volume: 25, Fascicolo: 1/2, Pagine: 70-98
(sequenze di) soggetti normati:B Emerson, Ralph Waldo 1803-1882 / Hawthorne, Nathaniel 1804-1864 / Thoreau, Henry David 1817-1862 / USA / Idealismo / L'elemento romantico / Interiorità
Notazioni IxTheo:AB Filosofia delle religioni
AE Psicologia delle religioni
CB Esistenza cristiana
CE Arte cristiana
KBQ America settentrionale
Altre parole chiave:B American Transcendentalism
B Esotericism
B American Renaissance
B Architecture
B Memory
B Romanticism
B Selfhood
B Cognition
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Riepilogo:Abstract This article provides a genealogy of the architectural figuration of human cognition from the ancient world to Renaissance Europe and, finally, to the American Renaissance where it came to possess a striking cultural and literary potency. The first section pursues the two-fold task of elucidating this archetypal trope for consciousness, both its ancient moorings and its eventual transmission into Europe. The second section shows that three of the most prominent writers of the American Renaissance—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Nathaniel Hawthorne—engaged this mystically inspired architectonic symbolism, employing far older techno-cultural suppositions about interior space. I thereby offer an account of the intellectual and spiritual heritage upon which Romantic writers in the United States drew to articulate cognitive interiority. These Romantics did more than value creativity in contradistinction to Enlightenment rationalism; they were acknowledging themselves as recipients of the ancient belief in cosmogenesis as self-transformation.
ISSN:1568-5292
Comprende:Enthalten in: Religion and the arts
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1163/15685292-02501003