Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis analyses Virginia Woolf’s novels through her own methodological approach to mind, to meaning, and to making whole. This volume argues that Woolf’s preoccupation with the metaphysics of “wholeness,” a dread, indeed, of both fragmentation, and of what endures, places her writings alongside Jason Brown’s microgenesis, formulated as an unfolding, emergent, and evolutionary process of cognitive activity. However, and crucially, it is not by assembling multiple flows of sense data into more complex constructions that we might perceive the objective world, but by sculpting away the unfit to reveal the structure of the world as a surfacing reality. In so many ways, Woolf’s novels represent an enactment of microgenetic theory as they emphasise the mind/brain state as a process of continual unfolding through progressive differentiation and discrimination to a distinct configuration. That is not to say that Woolf’s writings should be understood as anticipating Brown’s formulation of microgenetic theory as such, but that they should be understood as unearthing the adaptive and evolutionary significance (and signification) of microgeny through her own myriad methods of composition: tunnelling, transmuting, moments of being/nonbeing, and depth-and-surface, through which she may arrive at what she labels the “whole conception.” Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis is essential reading for researchers and students in Woolf studies, process philosophy, new materialisms, literary theory, and modernist literature.

1146709967
Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis analyses Virginia Woolf’s novels through her own methodological approach to mind, to meaning, and to making whole. This volume argues that Woolf’s preoccupation with the metaphysics of “wholeness,” a dread, indeed, of both fragmentation, and of what endures, places her writings alongside Jason Brown’s microgenesis, formulated as an unfolding, emergent, and evolutionary process of cognitive activity. However, and crucially, it is not by assembling multiple flows of sense data into more complex constructions that we might perceive the objective world, but by sculpting away the unfit to reveal the structure of the world as a surfacing reality. In so many ways, Woolf’s novels represent an enactment of microgenetic theory as they emphasise the mind/brain state as a process of continual unfolding through progressive differentiation and discrimination to a distinct configuration. That is not to say that Woolf’s writings should be understood as anticipating Brown’s formulation of microgenetic theory as such, but that they should be understood as unearthing the adaptive and evolutionary significance (and signification) of microgeny through her own myriad methods of composition: tunnelling, transmuting, moments of being/nonbeing, and depth-and-surface, through which she may arrive at what she labels the “whole conception.” Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis is essential reading for researchers and students in Woolf studies, process philosophy, new materialisms, literary theory, and modernist literature.

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Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

by James Kearns
Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

Virginia Woolf's Microgenesis: Mental States and Conceptual Worlds

by James Kearns

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Overview

Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis analyses Virginia Woolf’s novels through her own methodological approach to mind, to meaning, and to making whole. This volume argues that Woolf’s preoccupation with the metaphysics of “wholeness,” a dread, indeed, of both fragmentation, and of what endures, places her writings alongside Jason Brown’s microgenesis, formulated as an unfolding, emergent, and evolutionary process of cognitive activity. However, and crucially, it is not by assembling multiple flows of sense data into more complex constructions that we might perceive the objective world, but by sculpting away the unfit to reveal the structure of the world as a surfacing reality. In so many ways, Woolf’s novels represent an enactment of microgenetic theory as they emphasise the mind/brain state as a process of continual unfolding through progressive differentiation and discrimination to a distinct configuration. That is not to say that Woolf’s writings should be understood as anticipating Brown’s formulation of microgenetic theory as such, but that they should be understood as unearthing the adaptive and evolutionary significance (and signification) of microgeny through her own myriad methods of composition: tunnelling, transmuting, moments of being/nonbeing, and depth-and-surface, through which she may arrive at what she labels the “whole conception.” Virginia Woolf’s Microgenesis is essential reading for researchers and students in Woolf studies, process philosophy, new materialisms, literary theory, and modernist literature.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040361887
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/05/2025
Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232

About the Author

James Kearns was called as a barrister at Middle Temple, London, in 1997, specialising in both Criminal and Family law at the Inns of Court School of Law. He is a registered university teacher at the University of Plymouth, and lecturer in Contextual Studies and the Dissertation Module at the University Centre Cornwall College. He earned his M.A. in English Studies: Landscape and Literature at the University of Exeter, and he received his Ph.D. in English from the School of Society and Culture, University of Plymouth. He has published two fishy novels: Guppy and Herring.

Table of Contents

Introduction: There’s Theory and Stuff

1. A Question of Scales in The Voyage Out

2. Memorial Underpinnings in To the Lighthouse

3. On Making Wholes in The Years

4. Dissolution and Character: The Years Continued

5. Unifying – Dispersing in Between the Acts

Conclusion: Who Said the Play’s Over?

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