How Patterns Meet Tracing the Isomorphic Imagination in Contemporary Neuroculture

Authors
Publication date 10-2017
Journal Configurations
Volume | Issue number 25 | 4
Pages (from-to) 415-445
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
This essay argues that contemporary neuroculture is characterized by a disposition to detect and construct meaningful similarities between the brain and the extracerebral world on the basis of principles of analogy and morphological congruity. It analyzes several examples of this phenomenon, for which the term "the isomorphic imagination" is proposed. The essay focuses on the trope of "patterns" as a medium of such cross-mappings in William Gibson's novel Pattern Recognition (2003), art historian Barbara M. Stafford's study Echo Objects: The Cognitive Work of Images (2007), and recent work in the field of cultural neuroscience; it identifies discourses on affect and plasticity as two important conditions of possibility for the current isomorphic imagination. It is concluded that the study of the isomorphic imagination as a broad material-discursive dispositive can help to understand better the various ways in which the brain is currently related to its worldly and cultural contexts and vice versa.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1353/con.2017.0027
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