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Raveling the Brain: Toward a Transdisciplinary Neurorhetoric

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Humans have always been fascinated by the workings of the mind and now, more than ever, neuroscience has become a popular area of inquiry. While neuroscience advertises itself as an interdisciplinary field, drawing on biology, physics, engineering, and psychology, to date it has engaged less often with the humanities. In this transdisciplinary work, Jordynn Jack aims to show how the humanities—and in particular, rhetoric—have much to add to the neurosciences, offering rich insights into the ways in which the brain is enmeshed in the body, in culture, and in discourse.
Jack first looks at the problem of “neurohype”—exaggerated or oversimplified claims that essentialize brains and make them “uncritically real”—questioning some of the fundamental assumptions about the brain that experimental protocols and psychological concepts rely on. Then, through examples of research on sex and gender, political orientation, and affect, Jack demonstrates how a rhetorical-material approach can help to generate alternative approaches to studying the brain that might mitigate the problem of neurohype. By  raveling out  the roots of neurohype and  raveling back  its use through time,  Raveling the Brain  shows how rhetoric and neuroscience might be  raveled together,  or intertwined, to create a stronger transdisciplinary approach that might enrich our understanding of those issues of interest to neuroscientists and humanists alike. 
 

226 pages, Hardcover

Published August 5, 2019

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About the author

Jordynn Jack

11 books6 followers
Jordynn Jack (1977- ) was born in Ontario, Canada and studied English and technical writing at Glendon College, York University, before earning her PhD in rhetoric and composition at Pennsylvania State University. Now professor in the Department of English at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, she researches and teaches courses in a range of areas: rhetoric of science, women's rhetorics, science writing, and rhetoric of health, medicine, and disability. When she is not researching, writing, or teaching, she enjoys knitting, sewing, cooking, traveling, and hiking. She lives in Cary, North Carolina with her husband, daughter, and two cats.

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