Angus Fletcher was Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.
Angus Fletcher's new book The Topological Imagination is a visionary work of literary criticism. In the tradition of Kant's thought on the 'schematizing' function of the imagination, Coleridge's 'esemplastic' powers of imagining, and Wittgenstein's and Einstein's meditations on 'picturing, ' Fletcher explores the many ways shapes, surfaces, and edges are the playground of consciousness. Asking 'how spectral is any apparently single thing? What if a single object is actually an odd combination of smaller objects? What happens when shapes are actually compound?, ' he demonstrates a fundamental affinity between the history of mathematics, geography, and cosmology and works of poetry and speculative thought. Along the way he illuminates, with his usual brilliance, writings by Ovid, Shakespeare, Donne, Browne, Vico, Clare, Emerson, Rachel Carson, Walker Evans, and many others. In a blinkered and divisive era, Fletcher has written a self-help book for our planet.--Susan Stewart, author of The Poet's Freedom