This study will be of particular interest to scholars working in the history of the novel and the history of emotions. The engagement with extended mind theorists will also be helpful for scholars interested in theorizing how the novel relates to other technologies that were emerging in the eighteenth century. Kukkonen's skilful interweaving of the participatory nature of eighteenth-century fiction, the theoretical tools of embodied cognition, and the particularities of the "eighteenth-century media ecology" demonstrates some of the ways in which scholars can use concepts from 4E cognition to produce insightful readings of eighteenth-century engagements with the body, with formal experimentation, and with the materiality of literary texts.
Collin Cook, Woosong University, Eighteenth-Century Fiction
Professor Kukkonen is, instead, one of a handful of emerging scholars who are attempting to take the insights of literary scholars and historians as seriously as insights emerging from the social and hard sciences; this book is one sign of that project, and clearly demonstrates some of the potentials of tools drawn from a modern cognitivist narratology.
Sean Silver, Review of English Studies