Description

In this visionary book, Michael O'Neill contends that literary fiction may enable individuals to transcend tribe-centered biases by fostering empathetic understanding. Drawing from a wealth of neuroscience research, it investigates how relatable and emotionally resonant characters can encourage readers to identify with others whose lives are markedly different from their own. O'Neill explores the psychology behind group formation and the associated problem of racial bias and then offers a theoretical explanation for the existence of a cognitively uncanny concept—the psychological discomfort that occurs when expectations of another's behavior fail to match what is actually observed and how literature enables readers to bridge this cognitive gulf.

O'Neill examines three culturally significant novels that condemned racism and scrutinizes their historical impact. Uncle Tom's Cabin helped in the quest to abolish slavery by arguing for whites to embrace blacks as equals both in terms of their claims to civil rights and as human beings standing before God. Native Son helped end the pernicious "separate but equal" doctrine of segregation in the U.S. Supreme Court's momentous decision in Brown v. Board of Education. Finally, To Kill A Mockingbird's influence on the modern civil rights movement powerfully boosted the pursuit of legal equality for African Americans.

Cognition, Cultural Moments, and the Literary March Toward Civil Rights

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Hardback by Michael E. O'Neill

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In this visionary book, Michael O'Neill contends that literary fiction may enable individuals to transcend tribe-centered biases by fostering empathetic... Read more

    Publisher: Academica Press
    Publication Date: 30/07/2021
    ISBN13: 9781680532395, 978-1680532395
    ISBN10: 1680532391

    Number of Pages: 160

    Non Fiction , Politics, Philosophy & Society

    Description

    In this visionary book, Michael O'Neill contends that literary fiction may enable individuals to transcend tribe-centered biases by fostering empathetic understanding. Drawing from a wealth of neuroscience research, it investigates how relatable and emotionally resonant characters can encourage readers to identify with others whose lives are markedly different from their own. O'Neill explores the psychology behind group formation and the associated problem of racial bias and then offers a theoretical explanation for the existence of a cognitively uncanny concept—the psychological discomfort that occurs when expectations of another's behavior fail to match what is actually observed and how literature enables readers to bridge this cognitive gulf.

    O'Neill examines three culturally significant novels that condemned racism and scrutinizes their historical impact. Uncle Tom's Cabin helped in the quest to abolish slavery by arguing for whites to embrace blacks as equals both in terms of their claims to civil rights and as human beings standing before God. Native Son helped end the pernicious "separate but equal" doctrine of segregation in the U.S. Supreme Court's momentous decision in Brown v. Board of Education. Finally, To Kill A Mockingbird's influence on the modern civil rights movement powerfully boosted the pursuit of legal equality for African Americans.

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