Title: The Worlds of Critical Theory:
1The Worlds of Critical Theory
- Shine a Light on Literature, Music, Film, More
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5Why Critical Theory?
- Basic Background
- Since theres been literature, theres been
theory of it (think Aristotles Poetics), - But it became esp. prevalent during the Age of
Enlightenment (Edgar Allan Poe was a critic) - During the 1900s it was an established scholarly
practice
- Why the need for theory?
- The way we see and understand the world (our
paradigms) are all perceptions interpretation
(even history is not all fact history is
written by the victors) - Thus, critical theory challenges our paradigms
and allows us to interpret what we read, hear,
and see in a myriad of ways - But you have to learn how to do this in order to
be able to see what is not so apparent
6The Modes (well, the major ones the ones you
should know)
- Formalist
- Historical
- Biographical
- Structuralism
- Post-structuralism /Deconstructionist
- Psychological
- Mythological
- Sociological Marxist, Feminist, Postcolonial
- Postmodern
7Myriad Approaches
- Important No single theory is necessarily
correct or true above any other - Critical approaches usually derive from personal
discretion or applicability - Some approaches naturally lend themselves to
particular works
8For example
- Any work by Edgar Allan Poe would naturally lend
itself to a biographical approach
- It would be tough to talk about Animal Farm
without understanding the historical context
9Formalist Criticism
10Formalist Criticism (aka New Criticism)
- Regards literature as a unique form of human
knowledge to be regarded in its own terms - Apart from or above biographical, social,
historical, or cultural influences
- Literature is understood through its intrinsic
literary features - TEXT-CENTERED focus on words (think TIQATIQA)
11Formalist contd
- Close Reading
- Focus on intense relationships in a work
- Form and content cannot be meaningfully separated
- Interdependence of form and content make a text
literary
12Biographical Criticism
- The authors life impacts their work
13Biographical Criticism
- Considers that literature is written by actual
people - Understanding of authors life helps comprehend
the work - Authors experience SHAPES the creation of the
work - Practical advantage illuminates text
- Be judicious--base interpretation on what is in
the text itself
14Historical Criticism
- The authors time period affects their work
15Historical Criticism
- Investigation of social, cultural, and
intellectual contexts that produced the work - Necessarily includes authors biography and
milieu - Impact and meaning on original audience (as
opposed to todays) - How a texts meaning has changed over time
- Connotations of words, images (1940, America)
16Structuralism Moving beyond meaning
- The authors language system affects their work
17Structuralism
- Began with the French anthropologist Claude
Levi-Strauss - Through studying myth, culture, and language, he
concluded that language is a binary system - Binary because it could be divided into two
competing categories - Nature vs. culture
- Raw vs. cooked
- From this, he deduced that in language there are
no identities, only differences - Differences makes identity possible
- Then, Michel Foucault took this understanding and
explained how meaning of language changes over
time creating a new picture of the world
18Structuralism
- Key Terms Ideas
- Semiotics study of signs symbols
- Binary System a contrasting duality that
struggle for prevalence - Sign sound / word
- Signifier sound image
- Signified mental concept (object)
- Other a word has meaning through what it is
not, not any kind of natural relation to the
object - Why is a cat called cat?
19Structuralism in Literature
- Texts were analyzed and reduced to a binary
system of themes, such as - Man vs. woman
- Love vs. hate
- Destiny vs. freewill (ring a bell?)
20Deconstruction / Post-structuralist Criticism
Moving beyond the beyond
- The authors language system is unstable and thus
their work has no meaning or many meanings?
21Post-structuralism / Deconstructionist Criticism
- This took the binary system a step further and
stated that language is inaccurate - Language fundamentally unstable
- Literary texts, therefore, have no fixed meaning
- Mostly credited to the word of Jacques Derrida
who elaborated upon the idea that if language is
made up of differences, then so is the word - Thus, if language is continuously changing and
has no identity, neither does the world nor how
we understand the world
22Key Terms
- Deconstruction to break down/reverse
- Differance presence/arises out of differences
- Paradox seemingly contradictory but true
statement Language has no identity but makes
identity possible? - Micro-narratives understanding of the world is
broken up into smaller stories from varying
perspectives
23Deconstructionist contd..
- Attention shifts from what is being said to how
language is being used in a text - Paradox Deconstructionist criticism often
resembles formalist - Both involve close reading
- BUT decon. critics break text down into mutually
irreconcilable positions
24Deconstructionist contd..
- REJECTION of myth that authors control language
- Roland Barthes and Michel Foucault call for the
death of the author - No author, no matter how brilliant, can fully
control the meaning of a text - No truths only rival interpretations
- In textual studies, this theory is used to
reverse the binary systems and investigate the
myriad stories within the larger story.
25Pscyhoanalytical Criticism
- The authors mommy/daddy issues affect their work
26Psychological Criticism
- Owes much to the work of Sigmund Freud
- Analysis of Oedipus--considered Sophocles
insight into human mind influential - Painful memories (esp. from childhood) repressed,
stored in subconscious - Freud and followers (including Carl Jung)
believed that great literature truthfully
reflects life
27Key Terms
- Repressed desires, feelings, memories that are
controlled and remained locked in subconscious - Oedipus Complex the innate (but repressed)
desire to marry your mother and kill your father - Id pleasure principle (seeks immediate
gratification of desires) - Ego reality principle (understands there are
certain social behaviors that need to be
followed) - Superego conscience
28Visualization of Id, Ego, Superego
29Freuds Main Principles
- Oedipus Complex (this is how he famously analyzed
Hamlet) - Id/Ego/Superego heroes or villains can be
analyzed through their repressed desires and how
they either control them or revel in them - Dreams they reveal repressed desires and novels
can be interpreted as dreams - These can be used to analyze the author, the
characters, or the art itself
30Mythological Criticism
- The authors work is a new version of the same
story thats been told since time began.
31Mythological Criticism
- Based on work of Karl Jung and Joseph Campbell
- In Campbells The Hero with a Thousand Faces, he
studied religious and literary stories (Jesus,
Buddha, Gilgamesh, and other myths) and found
commonalities - Seeks recurrent universal patterns
- Combines insights of many disciplines
- Anthropology
- Psychology
- History
- Comparative religion
32Key Terms
- Archetype A symbol, character, situation, or
image that evokes a deep universal response - Collective Unconscious Set of primal memories
common to the human race (existing below
conscious mind)
33Mythological contd
- Explores artists common humanity (as opposed to
individual emphasis in pysch. crit.) - Important to link text to other texts with
similar or related archetypal situations - Looks for archetypes across mythology, as well as
in characters whose collective unconscious is
triggered by common symbols the sun, moon,
starts, earth, etc.
34Archetypical Themes
- Death rebirth
- The Journey Underground
- The Heavenly Ascent
- The Search for the father
- The false father
- Heaven/hell
- Rebel-hero
- The Scapegoat
- The Earth Goddess
- The femme fatale
35Campbells Hero Cycle
36Sociological Criticism Marxist, Feminist,
Postcolonial
- The authors social structure affect their work
37Sociological Criticism
- Examines literature in the cultural, economic,
and political context in which it is written or
received - Art not created in a vacuum
- Relationship between author and society
- Social status of author
- Social content of a work (values presented)
- Role of audience in shaping literature
38Different Fields
- Marxist
- Feminist
- Post-colonial
39MarxistBasic Principles
- Bourgeoisie rich capitalists oppressed workers
- Proletariat working class
- History was subject to change because of economic
changes - Every piece of art reflects its economic and
class struggles of the historical time period - Ex The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
40Marxist contd
- Economic and political elements of art
- Explores ideological content of literature
- Content determines form therefore all art is
political - DANGER imposing critics politics on work in
question can sway evaluation based on how closely
(or not) the work endorses ideology - VALUE illuminates political and economic
dimensions of literature that other approaches
may overlook
41Feminist Theory
- Examines how sexual identity influences the
creation and reception of literary works - Began with feminist movement, but largely
influenced by Structuralism and Deconstructionism
(work on Julia Kristeva, pupil of Derrida) - Feminist critics see a world saturated with
male-produced assumptions - Seek to correct imbalance by battling patriarchal
attitudes
42Key Terms
- Patriarchy system where men are in charge (can
be in terms of hereditary of simply
political/economical - Phallo-centric centered around man
- Emasculate to take away a mans power
- Objectification women are viewed/presented as
objects of desire by the male gaze - Conform meet demands of patriarchy
43Feminist contd
- Feminist criticism analyzes how an authors
gender influences ideas - Also, how sexual identity influences reader
- Reader sees text through eyes of his or her sex
- Examination of social forces responsible for
gender inequality
44Feminist Theory
- Originally showcased patriarchal and unequal
systems within novel that were primarily
concerned with men - In more modern context, still show inequalities,
but focus more on how women subvert, reject, and
triumph over these inequalities - Think of structuralism and then deconstruction
- The binary was first man vs. woman but its been
deconstructed to show how women can triumph or to
show there is no difference between - Instead of conforming, more modern scholars look
at how women reject the patriarchy or subvert it
(undermine it from the inside)
45Postcolonialism
- With the expansion of readership beyond European
American authors, came a theory that examined
the more-established literature and world
literature through the lens of colonialism how
the authors and characters were affected by their
countrys imperialist past - Greatly impacted by the work of Edward W. Said
Orientalism Western Representations of the
Orient
46Postcolonial Criticism Key Terms
- Imperialism the European colonization of parts
of the world, which came to an end, starting in
the 1800s all the way through the 1950s - Alterity "lack of identification with some part
of one's personality or one's community,
differentness, otherness" - Diaspora to refer to any people or ethnic
population forced or induced to leave their
traditional ethnic homelands, being dispersed
throughout other parts of the world - Eurocentrism emphasis revolves around European
(i.e. white) culture and understanding of the
world. - Hybridity a blend of cultures, refusing to
choose to one or the other
47Postcolonial Main Cornerstones
- Like feminism, it owes a lot to structuralism and
deconstruction - The Native characters are often considered as
others and the European characters define
themselves by how they are different from the
natives - These third world countries (again to separate
them from first world countries) are still
feeling the impacts of a past of foreign rule and
so their characters lack a sense of identity
are they the colonizer or are they the colonized? - More modern texts, resolve this with hybridity
I am not the colonizer or the colonized I can
be both. - In the US, this is especially central to the work
of immigrant Americans or Americans of minority
status - Also, important in analyzing African American
Literature and the lingering impacts of slavery
and segregation
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49Postmodern Criticism
- The authors work is influenced by everything but
the kitchen sink on second thought, throw the
sink in as well (a broken one, though).
50Postmodern Criticism
- Just like deconstrutionism followed
structuralism, postmodern criticism developed as
a an extension and rejection of modern (esp.
formalism) scholarly work - Greatly influenced by the work of Jean
Baudrillard Simulacra and Simulation - It argues for a broken view of meaning and an
exaggerated reality because of the influence of
media - Politically, this can be like anarchy, but when
it comes to criticism of the arts, its more about
having a loose approach (it can even be fun like
pop art)
51Key Terms
- Simulacra narratives/stories (our paradigms)
Ex Columbus discovered America - Hegemony control or dominating influence by one
person or group - Hyper-reality an inauthentic world that is
too much (too perfect as in Disneyworld) or too
saturated with media (like Times Square) - Fragmentation broken up, in terms of story,
body, or voice
52Rejection of Master Simulacra, Celebration of
Many Simulacra
- Postmodernism rejects one truth, one story, one
history - It embraces a variegated, fragmented view (many
narratives think of novel w/more than one
narrator) - It also embraces a hyperreality
53Credits
- Kennedy, X.J. and Gioia, D., eds. Literature An
Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama.
Eighth edition. New York Longman, 2002. - All images courtesy of Google Images
54THE END
- Deconstructionist, Jacques Derrida
- 1930-2004
- Or is it?