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E-raamat: Early Evolutionary Imagination: Literature and Human Nature

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Darwinian evolution is an imaginative problem that has been passed down to us unsolved. It is our most powerful explanation of humanity’s place in nature, but it is also more cognitively demanding and less emotionally satisfying than any myth. From the publication of the Origin of Species in 1859, evolution has pushed our capacity for storytelling into overdrive, sparking fairy tales, adventure stories, political allegories, utopias, dystopias, social realist novels, and existential meditations. Though this influence on literature has been widely studied, it has not been explained psychologically. This book argues for the adaptive function of storytelling, integrates traditional humanist scholarship with current knowledge about the evolved and adapted human mind, and calls for literary scholars to reframe their interpretation of the first authors who responded to Darwin.

1 Using Evolution to Explain the Evolutionary Imagination
1(36)
1.1 The Case for Literature
5(3)
1.2 A Current View of the Human Species
8(1)
1.3 The Human Niche
9(4)
1.4 Sociality and Social Organization
13(4)
1.5 Imagination and the Arts
17(10)
1.6 Species Identity and Literature
27(3)
References
30(7)
2 Myth-Making in Early Evolutionary Thought
37(32)
2.1 Negotiating Human Uniqueness
41(5)
2.2 Myths of Order, Cooperation, and Harmony
46(4)
2.3 Myths of Competition, Inequality, and Individualism
50(4)
2.4 Nature as Antagonist or Protagonist
54(5)
2.5 Making Meaning
59(6)
References
65(4)
3 Darwinism in Literature
69(32)
3.1 Previous Literary Scholarship
74(14)
3.2 The Position of Evolutionary Literary Theory
88(9)
References
97(4)
4 From Adventure to Utopia
101(40)
4.1 Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World (1912)
102(8)
4.2 Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886)
110(10)
4.3 Edward Bulwer-Lytton's The Coming Race (1871)
120(17)
References
137(4)
5 Jack London's Evolutionary Imagination
141(42)
5.1 The Split Cosmic Vision and the Handcuff to Life
146(8)
5.2 Martin Eden (1909)
154(15)
5.3 The Sea-Wolf (1904)
169(7)
5.4 Conclusion
176(3)
References
179(4)
6 H. G. Wells's Evolutionary Imagination
183(48)
6.1 The Little Animals and the Mind of the Race
190(7)
6.2 The Shakespeare of Science Fiction
197(5)
6.3 The Time Machine (1895)
202(10)
6.4 The Island of Doctor Moreau (1896)
212(7)
6.5 Conclusion
219(5)
References
224(7)
7 Joseph Conrad's Evolutionary Imagination
231(48)
7.1 Conrad's Science
236(4)
7.2 The Skeptical Life Strategy
240(17)
7.3 Heart of Darkness (1899)
257(14)
7.4 Conclusion
271(3)
References
274(5)
8 The Unimaginable Place in Nature
279(14)
References
289(4)
Index 293
Emelie Jonsson is Assistant Professor of English literature at the Arctic University of Norway, UiT, and Associate Editor of Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture. Her research centers on the friction between human psychology and naturalistic cosmology.