Title: Literary Elements: Symbol
1Literary ElementsSymbol
- A symbol is a thing that suggests more than its
literal meaning (Kennedy Gioia 217).
2Allegory
- Symbol is different from allegory, a story in
which persons, places and things form a system of
clearly labeled equivalents (Kennedy Gioia
217). - In allegory, there is a one-to-one relationship,
i.e., X stands for Y. For example, one famous
allegory is John Bunyans Pilgrims Progress. In
this work the hero, Christian, takes a journey to
the Heavenly City, meeting characters along the
way with names such as Piety and Mr. Worldly
Wiseman. The characters are flat with no real
depth and stand only for the concept of piety or
wisdom. The journey represents the pilgrimage
which every Christian must make to gain
salvation. - Allegory is rare these days. Another famous
example of one is seen in George Orwells Animal
Farm, in which different animals represent
particular political systems.
3Symbols Suggest
- Symbols tend toward multiple meanings or
possibilities. - Symbols suggest rather than stand for (Kennedy
and Gioia 217). - Symbols are expansive, opening up meaning and
giving a work depth, while allegories are
reductive, forcing an element to represent one
idea alone (Birkerts 115). - Kennedy and Gioia explain that Symbols generally
do not - stand for any one meaning, nor for anything
absolutely definite they point, they hint, or,
as Henry James put it, they cast long shadows
(217).
4Examples of symbols
- In Susan Glaspells A Jury of Her Peers, the
canary is itself a pet bird, but it also seems to
stand for Mrs. Wright, of the sweet singing
voice, caged and finally (spiritually) killed. - In Nathaniel Hawthornes The Birthmark,
Georgiannas birthmark is itself but may also be
seen as a concrete illustration of the
imperfection of physical humanity, an
imperfection which Aylmer, in his quest to play
God and control nature, cannot accept. - In Stephen Cranes The Open Boat, the boat is
itself but is also a symbol of the larger world
(a small world microcosm) in which a
community of men must grapple with the forces of
nature.
5Two Kinds of Symbols
- Conventional or traditional symbols These
symbols have meanings that large numbers of
people understand. They embody universal
suggestions of meaning, such as that a voyage
suggests life or flowing water suggests time and
eternity (Symbol 467). Can you guess what the
visual symbols below stand for? - Depending on ones own cultural background, she
might answer that these are three of the letter
t. Or he might say that they are the masts of a
ship. If one has been raised in a Judeo-Christian
culture, however, its highly likely that that
person might see three crosses here,
representative of the Crucifixion of Jesus and of
salvation. -
- In the course assignments, I have organized the
sections in a general subject format gender,
nature, family, and so on. But the theme of Jack
Londons To Build a Fire is not simply
nature. Instead one might want to formulate a
complete sentence about the relationship of man
and nature.
6More conventional symbols which may be expressed
as words or pictures
- a flag for country (the flag)
- Go Hogs!
- Red Razorback for the University of Arkansas
- an X at the end of a letter for a kiss XXX
- (smack!)
- spring as the symbol of new beginnings
- a slash line through a sign for
NO, - as in No Parking.
7Two Kinds of Symbols (continued)
- Private or original symbols These kinds of
symbols may be relative, dependent upon the
beholder or upon how they are used in a work. - The park bench where you metthe one you love is
a private symbolwhich you interpret privately. -
- The empty space on the wall where the picture
once was could be a private symbol of personal
loss for one person, while for another the
lighter shade of that space simply indicates that
a wall needs to be painted. - In fact, a symbol may shift in meaning as the
work develops. Private symbols acquire meaning
because of the ways they are used in a literary
work (Symbol 467). Critic Sven Birkerts writes
that private symbols gain their meaning
gradually, through repetition or strategic
placement and that they have powerful,
condensed meanings (Symbolism 113).
8More private or original symbols
- WAKE UP!
- A gun, for example, may represent destruction,
but it may also be interpreted as a symbol of
sexual potency, Birkerts suggests (113). - On the other hand, some objects are just and only
that, themselves that is, a gun is simply a gun
in a story and is not meant to carry any larger
meaning. I think maybe it was Sigmund Freud who
once cried out in exasperation, Sometimes a
cigar is just a cigar! -) - One can interpret symbols through recognition of
their use in patterns, repetition, or strategic
placement in a work (Birkerts 113). But Sven
Birkerts warns that symbols are not planted in
a literary work like radishes and one does not
simply find them and pluck them free (113). - Instead, he writes, symbols function as a kind of
forcefield, sending out waves of suggestion that
penetrate many layers of the work and add to its
meaning (Birkerts 113).
9A look at one symbolthe A in The Scarlet
Letter
- One can think of the phrase multiplicity of
meanings as expressing the concept that a symbol
is fluid, not stable, and can suggest many
possible meanings. - In Hawthornes novel The Scarlet Letter, Hester
Prynne is a Puritan woman who is pregnant out of
wedlock and is ostracized by the Puritan
community of Boston. She is punished and forced
by town elders to become a living symbol and
reminder of her sin and walking warning to all
when she is sentenced to wear a red letter A on
the bodice of her dresses.
10The meaning of the A
- As the novel progresses, Hester ages and changes
and the townspeople begin to see both her and the
symbol A in different ways. Thus the A comes
to have a multiplicity of meanings, each of which
deepens and develops the meaning of the novel - A Adulteress (Hester is guilty of the sin of
adultery.) - A Art (Hester is a very creative, skilled
seamstress who makes her living through this
art) - A Able (Hester is able to support herself and
daughter and to survive the towns
condemnation.) - A Admirable (The townspeople begin to admire
Hester.) - A Angel (She tends the sick and dying and is
an angel of charity toward others.) - A Arthur (Everyone wants to know who the
father of the illegitimate child is, but
Hester will not betray him. Ironically, his
initial is displayed in Hesters punishment
his name is Arthur. -
11Final words of warning!
- Hunt Lyman, in his web page titled Literary
Concepts from the University of Virginia, offers
these helpful comments - Symbols are confusing to many students because
natural symbolism is confused with literary
symbolism. Definition Something that represents
something else by association, resemblance, or
convention, especially a material object used to
represent something invisible. - Symbols in a basic sense are one of the most
natural human functions. In fact, words
themselves are all symbols -- language is our
most universal symbolic system. The key behind
symbols is they contain an element of
arbitrariness -- there is no single correlation
emphasis added. Words, for example, are
entirely arbitrary(Lyman).
12Kennedy, X. J. and Dana Gioia, eds. Literature
An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama.
New York Longman, 1999. Lyman, Hunt.
Symbolism. Literary Concepts. U of Virginia.
10 March 2000 lthttp//www.people.virginia.edu/hl5
s/general/concepts.htmlsymbolismgt. Symbol. A
Handbook to Literature. 6th ed. C.Hugh Holman and
William Harmon, eds. New York Macmillan, 1992.
466-67. Symbolism. Literature The Evolving
Canon. Ed. Sven Birkerts. Boston Allyn and
Bacon, 1993. 113-15.
13CREDITS
- Developed and prepared by Dr. Linda Lovell
- NorthWest Arkansas Community College
- http//faculty.nwacc.edu/ljlovell