Neural Geographies: Feminism and the Microstructure of Cognition

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Routledge, 1998 - Philosophy - 226 pages
Neural Geographies draws together recent feminist and deconstructive theories, early Freudian neurology and contemporary connectionist theories of cognition. In this original work, Elizabeth A. Wilson explores the convergence between Derrida, Freud and recent cognitive theory to pursue two important issues: the nature of cognition and neurology, and the politics of feminist and critical interventions into contemporary scientific psychology. This book seeks to reorient the usual presumptions of critical studies of the sciences by addressing the divisions between the static and the changeable; the natural and the political; the neuro-cognitive and the cultural that have been traditional to both scientific and critical accounts of neurology and cognition.

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About the author (1998)

Elizabeth A. Wilson is a Lecturer in the Centre for Women's Studies at the Australian National University.

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