Title: New Criticism: Theories
1New Criticism Theories
- New Critical Approach to Narratives The Jilting
of Granny Weatherall as an Example
2Outline
- The Jilting of Granny Weatherall
- New Critical Approach to Poetry Narratives
- New Criticism Major Views and Theorists
3The Jilting of Granny Weatherall
- 1. How do you characterize Granny? What does she
feel about being jilted? What is she proud of? - 2. How does Granny relate to the people around
her? Why is she impatient with the doctor as
well as her daughter Cordelia? - 3. Why is Granny pre-occupied with Hapsy?
- 4. What is Grannys obsession? Has she got over
it at the end? What are her concepts of hell
and God? - 5. How does the narrative style help convey the
meanings you have found? Is Granny a reliable
narrator? Are there contradictions in her?
4Granny Weatherall personality
- 1. She has weathered all jilting, death of her
husband and daughter, hardships, her own
experience of death. (e.g. pp. 490-91) - 2. Strong and stubborn cannot stand being seen
as senile (e.g. seeing Dr. Harry as a child
cannot stand Cornelia) (pp. 488 489 490.) - 3. Keep things in order p. 491.
- 4. Her mind in disorder e.g. other people
floating around her imagining things
gradually separated from reality (p. 492. cannot
hear lose sense of time) taking a cart.
5Disorder and Contradictions in Grannys mind
- 1. Views of death get over death, but still
unfamiliar with it p. 489-90. - 2. Shifts between past and present first
remembering and then going back to the past (e.g.
490-91) - 3. Grannys feelings about being jilted
- a. Experience of Hell (p. 491 . . . A whirl of
dark smoke ) - b. wounded vanity. P. 492
- 4. Believe in God (pp. 491 492 493)
- 5. Obsession avoid thinking of George and cannot
forget him (493) I found a whole world
better.
6Ending Possible Reading
- Possible readings
- 1. She decides to take action, instead of
waiting. - 2. No bridegroom can satisfy her. . . .the
second bridegroom, Christ, denies her his
presence for the same reason that George
didwhich is that He knows she does not really
want Him. (Cobb in Bloom 101). - 3. Can never forget Granny is fixated on a
juvenile romance. She mistakes Christ for her
bridegroom.
7Granny is not ready to die
- 1. Love for Hapsy pp. 492 - 495
- "When this one was born it should be the last.
.. . It should have been born first, for it was
the one she had truly wanted. . . - 2. Love and care for the other children and the
other people. - 3. God does not give her a sign to make her ready
to die or take her to heaven.
8Texts about Death
- Can we compare Granny with After Death,
Bourne, Convergence of the Twain and A
Slumber did her Spirit Seal? - Two ways
- -- make personal association and evaluation
- -- find a proper context (e.g. the difficult and
contradictory ways of female self-assertions in
19th and 20th century Brit. Am. Lit., when men
are still dominant in both literature and
society) and then try to specify it.
9 New Criticism Methodology (1) Poetry
Whole Themes pattern, tension, ambiguities,
paradox, contradictions
- Parts
- Denotations, connotations
- and etymological roots
- Allusions
- Prosody
- Relationships
- among
- the various elements
10 New Criticism Methodology (1) Narrative
Whole Themes harmonized pattern, tension,
ambiguities, paradox, contradictions
- Parts
- Narrator
- (Point of view),
- dialogue,
- setting,
- Plot
- Characterization
- Relationships
- among
- the various elements
11 New Criticism Major Theorists
- T.S. Eliot
- objective correlative
- The poem is an impersonal formulation of common
feelings and emotions. (textbook p. 40) - emphasis on structural analysis
- the poet as a catalyst (42)
- I. A. Richards (Practical Criticism) Cleanth
Brooks (Understanding Poetry), F. R. Leavis
(Scrutiny), etc.
12 New Criticism Major Views
- A poem is autonomous, with an ontological status.
- Intentional Fallacy,
- Affective Fallacy
- Poetry offers a different kind of truth (poetic
truth) than science. - Heresy of Paraphrase
13Reference
- Katherine Anne Porter / edited, with an
introduction by Harold Bloom. New York Chelsea
House P, 1996.