Editors: Isabel Jaén (Portland State University) & Julien Jacques–Simon (Indiana University East)
Publisher: Routledge, 2021
This book explores the work of Cervantes in relation to the ideas about the mind that circulated in early modern Europe and were propelled by thinkers such as Juan Luis Vives, Juan Huarte de San Juan, Oliva Sabuco, Andrés Laguna, Andrés Velásquez, Marsilio Ficino, and Gómez Pereira.
The editors bring together humanists and scientists: literary scholars and doctors whose interdisciplinary research integrates diverse types of sources (philosophical and medical treatises, natural histories, rhetoric manuals, pharmacopoeias, etc.) alongside Cervantes’s works to examine themes and areas including emotion, human development, animal vs. human consciousness, pathologies of the mind, and mind-altering substances.
Their chapters trace the cognitive themes and points of inquiry that Cervantes shares with other early modern thinkers, showing how he both echoes and contributes to early modern views of the mind.
Contents
Foreword: Historicizing Cognitive Approaches to Cervantes – Howard Mancing
Introduction: A Cognitive-Historicist Approach to Cervantes’s Work – Isabel Jaén and Julien Jacques-Simon
Chapter 1 – Spanish Brain Science and Philosophy of Mind in the Time of Cervantes: Three Seminal Thinkers – Antonio Martín Araguz
Chapter 2 – Emotion and Human Development in Cervantes’s Don Quijote: The Case of Sancho Panza – Isabel Jaén
Chapter 3 – Aging, Emotion, and Cognition: El viejo zeloso and Early Modern Thought – Elena Carrera
Chapter 4 – Human Thinking about Thinking Animals in the Early Modern Spanish and Spanish American World – Steven Wagschal
Chapter 5 – Wit, Imagination, and the Goat: The Untrodden Paths of Literary Creation in Cervantes’s Don Quijote and Huarte’s Examen de ingenios – Christine Orobitg
Chapter 6 – Cervantes and the Mother of the Muses: Views of Memory in Early Modern Spain – Julia Domínguez
Chapter 7 – Melancholic Consciousness: Cervantes’s Contribution to Early Modern Views of Melancholy and the Emergence of the Fictional Mind – Isabel Jaén and Julien Jacques-Simon
Chapter 8 – Mind-Altering Agents in Cervantes’s Work: Regarding His Sources on Pharmacology – Francisco López-Muñoz and Cecilio Álamo
Chapter 9 – Don Quijote and Cervantes’s Knowledge of Neurological Disorders – José-Alberto Palma, Fermín Palma, and Julien Jacques-Simon
Source: https://www.routledge.com/Cervantes-and-the-Early-Modern-Mind/Jaen-Simon/p/book/9780415785471