Title: Literary Criticism
1Literary Criticism
2Warm Up
- Word association means developing terms, ideas,
concepts that go along with certain words.
Thinking here should be minimal because it may
hinder your honest associations. Each term
should build off of the next. - Consider the following term
- FEMINIST
FEMINISM
FEMININE
3Categorize These Terms
- fashion, football, breadwinner, pilot, strength,
flower, ambitious, perseverance, compassionate,
bossy, sexual, helpless, thoughtful, soft,
brassy, dangerous, perpetrator, victim,
attractive, opinionated, hostile, emotional,
sensual, nurturing, battered. Try not to over
think, go with your first instinct- YOUR
instinct, not your neighbors!
Both
Neither
Female
Male
4- Literary theories were developed as a means to
understand the various ways people read texts. - All literary theories are lenses through which we
can see texts. - There is nothing that says that one is better
than another, or that you should read according
to any of them, but it is sometimes fun to
decide to read a text with one in mind because
you often end up with a whole new perspective on
your reading.
5Feminist Criticism
- A Feminist Critic sees cultural and economic
disabilities in a patriarchal (centered around
men) society which have hindered or prevented
women from realizing their creative
possibilities. - Womens cultural identification is as a merely
negative object, or Other to man as the
defining and dominating Subject.
6Some Critics Believe
- Our civilization is, as a whole, patriarchal.
- The concepts of gender are largely, if not
entirely, cultural constructs, affected by the
ever-present patriarchal biases of our
civilization.
7- This patriarchal ideology, or belief, also takes
over those writings, which have been considered
great literature. - Such works lack independent female role models,
are implicitly addressed to male readers, and
leave the woman reader an alien outsider or else
request her to identify against herself by
assuming male values and ways of perceiving,
feeling, and acting. - Female roles in society have historically often
been based upon (or at least emulated within)
literature.
8For Example
- One could conduct a feminist analysis of Of Mice
and Men by examining Curleys wifes role, or
lack of a role and even a name, in the novel.
Does this make her more or less important? - We were able to acknowledge the way in which
Steinbeck portrayed her in a way that was based
off of societys view of women and their roles in
life.
9Warm Up
The study of gender, within literature, is of
general importance to everyone -Judith Spector
Being a feminist is not a gender-specific role.
Erin, Grade 11
- Patriarchal society
- Consider how our patriarchal social influences
the world we live in. Consider life, art,
expression, academia, work, etc - Where do you see the influence of this social
construct? How? Be specific. Do not focus on
listing several examples so much as explaining
one (or a few). This is a statement of
observation, so also dont be bogged down by
personal feelings of positivity or negativity.
I have a male mind with male experiences.
Therefore I see things through the perception of
a man. I couldnt relate to some of Virginia
Woolfs views and I despised the way she pushed
her viewpoint on the reader. This was brought on
by my masculinity, I feel. Bill, Grade 12,
after reading A Room of Ones Own
We dont know what womens vision is. What do
womens eyes see? How do they carve, invent,
decipher the world? I dont know. I know my own
vision, the vision of one woman, but the world
seen through the eyes of others? I only know
what mens eyes see. -Viviane Forrester, New
French Feminisms
10Traditional Gender Roles
- Males rational, strong, protective, and
decisive - Women emotional (irrational), weak, nurturing
and submissive. - Patriarchy by definition is sexist.
- The inborn belief in the inferiority of women is
a form of biological essentialism because it is
based on biological difference between the sexes
that are considered part of our unchanging
essence as men and women.
11Biological Essentialism
- For example, the word hysteria is derived from
the Greek word for womb (hystera) and refers to
psychological disorders deemed peculiar to women
and characterized by overemotional, extremely
irrational behavior. Freud believed women could
be cured of hysteria through hysterectomies.
12Feminism v. Gender
- Feminist celebrate differences between men and
women but they do not believe they are
necessarily inferior to men based on biologicals. - Feminism distinguished between the word sex
(refers to biological constitution as male or
female) and gender (refers to cultural
programming as feminine or masculine) - AKA women are NOT born feminine and men are NOT
born masculine, RATHER these gender categories
are constructed by society this view is referred
to as social constructionism.
13Developed Through 3 stages
- Feminine (1840-80) Women writers imitated
dominant male artistic norms and aesthetic
standards - Feminist (1880-1920) radical and often separatist
positions are maintained - Female (1920 onwards) looked particularly at
female writing and female experience.
14Drastic Changes
- 1970s- expose patriarchy, the cultural mindset in
men and women which perpetrated sexual
inequality. COMBATIVE. - 1980s- Firstly, became more eclectic, meaning it
began to draw upon findings and approaches of
other kinds of criticism- Marxism, structuralism,
linguistics, and so on. Secondly, switches focus
from attacking male versions of the world to
exploring the nature of the female world and
outlook, and reconstructing the lost or
suppressed records of female experience.
Thirdly, attention switched to the need to
construct a new canon of womens writing by
rewriting the history of the novel and of poetry
in such a way that neglected women writers were
given new prominence.
15French FeminismOne is not born a woman one
becomes one.
- Focuses on 2 forms materialist feminism and
psychoanalytic feminism. - Materialist Fem. Is interested in social and
economic oppression of women. - Beauvoir strongly believed that marriage trapped
and stunted womens intellectual growth and
freedom - If woman seems to be the inessential being
which never becomes essential it is because she
herself fails to bring about this change - Psychoanalytic Fem. Is interested in the womans
psychological experience. - They are also interested in how these two ideas
interact with each other.
16Materialist Fem.
- Is interested in social and economic oppression
of women. - Family is looked at as an economic unit. As the
lower class are suppressed by the upper class,
women become subordinates within families. - Beauvoir strongly believed that marriage trapped
and stunted womens intellectual growth and
freedom - If woman seems to be the inessential being
which never becomes essential it is because she
herself fails to bring about this change - Women have been written out of history and
therefore have no historical record of shared
culture, shared traditions, or shared oppression. - women lack a concrete means for organizing
themselves into a unit They have no collective
recorded past no religion of their own they
live dispersed among the males, attached through
residence, housework, economic condition, and
social standing to certain men-fathers or
husbands-more firmly than they are to other
women. - In other words, womens allegiance to men from
their own social class, race or religion always
supersedes their allegiance to women from
different classes, races or religions. In fact,
it also supersedes their allegiance to women from
their own class, race, religion.
17Psychoanalytical Fem.
- Repression also at the level of the unconscious
- Psychological liberation comes in the form of
language because it is within our language that
detrimental patriarchal notions of sexual
difference have been defined and exert power. - Our language, for example, poses a patriarchal
binary thought in which we see the world in terms
of polar opposites, and one is superior to the
other. Ex. Head/heart, father/mother. - Women will not resist patriarchal thinking by
becoming part of the power structure in obtaining
equal status and opportunity. Women are
themselves the source of energy, of power, and
therefore need a new, feminine language that
undermines or eliminates the patriarchal binary
thinking called ecriture feminine (feminine
writing).
18Feminine Writing
- Resists patriarchal modes of thinking and
writing, which generally require presecribed
correct methods of organization, rationalist
rules of logic (logic that stays above the neck
relying on narrow definitions of cognitive
experience and discrediting many kinds of
emotional and intuitive experience), and linear
reasoning (x precedes y, which precedes z) - Examples of feminine writing Marguerite Duras,
Colette, and Jean Genet, Clarice Lispector, Toni
Morrisons Beloved, Virginia Woolfs Mrs.
Dalloway, James Joyces Finnegans Wake, and
William Faulker Absalom, Absalom! - utopian thought has always been a source of
inspiration for feminists
19Multicultural Feminism
- Studies awareness of ones own subjectivity.
- Cultural operations differ by country, race,
religion, culture, belief, etc. - African American feminists reveals that political
and theoretical limitations inherent in white
mainstream feminists neglect of cultural
experience different from their own. - Sexism and racism go hand in hand. Racism has
often blinded cultures to sexism by dehumanizing
and thus de-womanizing- subjects.
20Hey!
21We call it GENDER studies for a reason!
- Traditionally, feminist criticism blossomed
following the womens movement of the 1960s.
Terms like socialisation and conditioning
influence feminine images in literature and
culture. - However, gender studies is more about the ROLES
of the different sexes within culture. Men are
just as likely to succumb to societal, cultural,
and/or historical pressures such as duty, honor,
legacy, expectation, ROLE.
22In The End
- The power behind the ideology of gender study
lies in the way it encompasses fundamental
cultural and social values pertaining to the
relations between men and women. The ideology of
gender determines - What is expected of us
- What is allowed of us
- What is valued in us
- The manifestation of gender difference can be
found in the construction of - Roles (what men and women do)
- Relations (how men and women relate to each
other) - Identity (how men and women perceive themselves)
23When You Look At Literature, Art, or Life
- Dont fixate on one idea
- Look at how characters relate to one another.
- Look at how the author presents a character.
- Look at how others perceive a character (readers
or characters). - Look at expectations of a character.
- Look at how one character identifies with his or
herself, or even other characters. - DO these reflect individual, cultural, and/or
societal ideals?
24Consider
Refute
Defend
- How does Conrads Heart of Darkness reflect
patriarchal ideology through Marlows comments
about and attitude toward women and through his
sexist representations of the numerous minor
female characters that populate the novel
(including his aunt, Kurtzs intended, the
savage woman, the native laundress, and the
women in black at the company headquarters in
Europe)? - Does the novel invite us to accept or criticize
Marlows sexism? - Is the novel even aware of his sexism?
Qualify
25Do You Feel Gender Played a Role in Your
Interpretation of HoD?
Put the following words into categories male,
female , neither, both voyage, hunter, hunted,
worry, victim, savage, brute, death, affair,
servant, adventure, war, blood, brutal, slave,
master, withhold, secret, darkness, evil
26Biographical
27Biographical Criticism
- Using information about an author's life and
background to better understand and analyze their
work. Examining the writer's life may shed light
on his or her literature and the literature of
the era. Here are some ways it can help you
better examine a text
28- It helps the reader to understand elements the
author uses in his work, such as words,
allusions, themes, characters, etc. - The author's background often adds significance
to the written work. - It could help the reader to discover the author's
audience and intention.
29- It is important to remember that you shouldnt
always assume that the author's life is
necessarily the same as the work's contents.
Avoid using unsound sources of information about
the author's life.
30Psychoanalytical Criticism
- sometimes a cigar is just a cigar
31Psychological and Psychoanalytic Criticism
- Psychological criticism deals with a work of
literature primarily as an expression, in
fictional form, of the personality, state of
mind, feelings, and desires of its author. The
assumption of psychoanalytic critics is that a
work of literature is correlated with its
authors mental traits
32Most Importantly
- There are two popular theories, both stemmed from
the same seed Freudian Psychoanalysis and
Lacans Theory of Psychoanalysis. - Psychoanalytical criticisms deals with the
concepts of our unconscious and conscious.
33Sigmund Freud
- 1856-1939
- Theory of psyche referred to as classical
psychoanalysis - Remember that Freuds ideas we evolved over a
long period of time, and many of his ideas
changed as he developed them, additionally a lot
it was speculative. - Hoped others would continue to develop and event
correct certain ideas over time - View of human behavior is relevant to our
experience with literature
341. Origins of the Unconscious
- When we view the world through a psychoanalytic
lenses we see it is comprised of individual human
beings, each with a psychological history that
begins in childhood experiences in the family and
each with patterns of adolescent and adult
behavior that are the direct result of that early
experience. - Goal of psychoanalysis is to resolve
psychological problems disorders or dysfunctions
- Focus is on patterns of behavior that are
destructive in some way. - Our repetitive destructive behavior is proof of
the unconscious.
35You cant always get what you consciously want,
but you get what you unconsciously need!
- Freuds most radical insight was that we are
motivated/driven by desires, fears, needs, and
conflicts of which we are Unaware. - Unconscious the storehouse for painful
experiences and emotions, wounds, fears, guilty
desires, and unresolved conflicts we dont want
to know about. It is a dynamic entity that
engages us at the deepest level of our being.
36Role of Family
- We are each products of the roles we are given in
the family-complex. - Birth of the unconscious lies in the way we
perceive our place in the family and how we react
to this self-definition Im the failure
Im the perfect child, etc.. - Sibling rivalry is a part of our unconscious.
37Repression
- forgetting or ignoring unresolved conflicts,
unadmitted desires, or traumatic past events so
they are forced from the conscious awareness and
into the unconscious. - Gives our painful experiences and emotions force
by making them the organizers of our current
experience we unconsciously behave in ways that
will allow us to play out, without admitting it
to ourselves, our conflicted feelings about the
painful experience and emotions we repress.
38Sublimation
- Repressed material is promoted into something
grander or is disguised as something noble. - For instance, sexual urges may be given
sublimated expression in the form of intense
religious experiences or longings.
39Id-Ego-Superego
- ID- our primitive impulses (thirst, anger,
hunger) and desire for immediate gratification or
release. Born with it. Allows us to get our
basic needs met in infancy. Based on pleasure
principle where id wants whatever feels good at
the time without considerations for other
circumstances.
40Superego Ego
- Superego- represents the conscience, our moral
entity. Develops due to moral and ethical
restraints placed on us by our caregivers.
Dictates belief of right or wrong. - Ego- balances impulse (id) and conscience
(superego). Based on reality principle,
understands that people have needs and desires
and that sometimes being impulsive or selfish can
hurt us in the end. Ego has to meet the needs of
the id while taking in the reality of the
situation.
41Oedipus Complex
- Male conceives the desire to eliminate the father
and become the sexual partner of the mother.
Three stages oral, anal, and phallic. Phallic
symbols. Role of phallus in development penis
envy and fear of castration - Eventually abandoned out of fear of castration
(when a boy realizes females are castrated and
imagines this may be his fate if he does not
subordinate his desire for his mother).
Represses desire and adjusts to reality
principle until he can become the patriarch.
Boy identifies his father as a symbol of manhood.
42Oedipus Complex
- According to Freud female sexuality is a dark
continent and therefore a mystery. - However, ONE idea is that females abandon this
notion after first realizing she is castrated
and thus inferior and so rejecting her mother and
seducing her father, then upon failure she
returns to the mother and feminine role.
However, she still envies the phallus that she
will never have so she unconsciously substitutes
a desire to have her fathers baby.
432. The defenses, Anxiety, Core Issues
- Unconscious desires not to recognize or change
our destructive behaviors are served by our
defenses. Defenses are the processes by which
the contents of our unconscious are kept in the
unconscious. (aka- keeps the repressed
repressed) - Selective perception
- Selective memory
- Denial- believing that the problem doesnt exist
- Projection- ascribing our fear/problem on someone
else then taking it out on them. - Screen Memory- trivial memory whose function is
to obliterate a more significant one. - Freudian Slip- Repressed material in the
unconscious finds its way out through a slip of
the tongue, pen, unintended action, etc
44Cont.d
- Transference- redirect recalled emotions on
another. - Avoidance- staying away
- Regression- return to former psychological state
- Through which we can actually experience Active
reversal - Dream Work
- Displacement- symbolic substitution one person
is represented by another because of some link or
association. - Condensation- A number of people/events are
combined and represented as one image/dream.
45Anxiety
- When defenses break down.
- Reveals core issues
- Fear of intimacy (chronic and overpowering
feeling that emotional closeness will hurt or
destroy us and we remain emotionally safe through
distance) - Fear of abandonment (physical/emotional
abandonment) - Fear of betrayal (nagging feeling that
friends/loved ones cant be trusted in any
circumstances) - Low self-esteem (belief you are less worthy)
- Insecure or unstable sense of self (inability to
sustain a sense identity or knowing onesself) - Oedipal fixation (complex) (dysfunctional bond
with a parent of the opposite sex that we dont
outgrow and thus affects our relationships with
peers) - Most are interchangeable, core issues are also
defenses. Some even result from the development
of others.
46Whats it All Mean?
- Our defenses keep us unaware of our unconscious
experience, and our anxiety (even if it is
somewhat prolonged or recurrent) doesnt succeed
in breaking through our repression. SO how can
we learn the operations of our own unconscious
without psychotherapy?? - Watch your own patterns unconscious manifests
clues in our relationships (interpersonal/friendly
/sexual) through reenactments of unresolved
conflicts. - Also through dreams!
473. Dreams and Dream Symbols
- Dream Displacement our unconscious safely
emitting our repressed feelings. - Latent content underlying meaning
- Manifest content what we actually dream
- Primary revision displacement and condensation
occurring while we dream - Secondary revision forgetting parts of the
dream while we are awake.
484. The Meaning of Death
- Crisis brings into light wounds, fears, guilty
desires, or unresolved conflicts that I have
failed to deal with and that demand action. - Trauma is also a reference to a painful
experience that scars us psychologically. - Our relationship to death-whether or not we are
traumatized by it- is a principal organizer of
our psychological experience. - Freud suggests a theory called Death Drive
which explains high degree of self-destructive
behaviors physically and mentally, and in whole
nations (conflict). His conclusion was that
there must be something in the biological makeup
to explain this death work (psychological and
physical self-destruction)
494. The Meaning of Death
- For many of us, death keys into our fear of
abandonment. Death is the ultimate abandonment.
Religious belief comes into play as one of the
few comforts. - Fear of abandonment as plays into our fear of the
death of others. - Thus, death plays into our fear of intimacy as
well. - Fear of death often results in fear of life. If
I dont feel anything, then I cant be hurt. - The bigger our fear, the bigger our fascination.
- Media representations of death serve as an outlet
for us to project our fears and problems onto
people and events outside of ourselves. This
becomes a defense.
50Consider
- How might an understanding of the ways in which
death work can be projected onto the
environment help us to interpret Marlow in Joseph
Conrads Heart of Darkness?
515. The Meaning of Sexuality
526. Lacanian Theory
53- This theory requires that we investigate the
psychology of a character or an author to figure
out the meaning of a text (although to apply an
authors psychology to a text can also be
considered biographical criticism, depending upon
your point of view).
54For example
- A reader could complete a psychoanalytical
analysis of Abigail in The Crucible by examining
her possible thought process based on her motives
and actions. The same can be said for several
characters in that play. Furthermore, you can
look deeper into Arthur Millers own
psychological motives for writing the text based
on his biographical information.
55Reader Response
56Reader Response
- This type of criticism does not designate any one
critical theory, but focuses on the activity of
reading a work of literature. Reader-response
critics turn from the traditional idea of
breaking a text apart to gain meaning to the
responses of readers as their eyes follow a text.
This form of analysis takes the emphasis away
from analyzing a texts characters, plot, style,
and structure and places it on the connection
between a readers experience and the text. It is
through this interaction that meaning is made.
57- This is the school of thought most students seem
to adhere to. Proponents believe that literature
has no objective meaning or existence. People
bring their own thoughts, moods, and experiences
to whatever text they are reading and get out of
it whatever they happen to, based upon their own
expectations and ideas.
58In Other Words!
- Meaning is defined as the intersection of text,
topic, and author and reader- meaning is IN that
moment of intersection. - Directly opposed to new criticism excellence in
literature is defined by group norms (rather than
an author giving literature meaning, meaning is
gained when multiple readers think the text is
worthwhile.)
59For Example
- Several readers are able to experience a sense of
catharsis when Lennie dies at the end of Of Mice
and Men based on their human instinct of feelings
and the attachment they had to him as a
character. This reactions comes from prior
experiences and a readers own personal opinions,
not the analysis of figurative language or
symbolism.
60Questions to Ask
- What does the text mean to me? What does it mean
to you? Can we come to a consensus? - How does the text connect to my personal
experiences?
61Historical Criticism
- Using this theory requires that you apply to a
text specific historical information about the
time during which an author wrote. History, in
this case, refers to the social, political,
economic, cultural, and/or intellectual climate
of the time.
62For Example
- When reading The Crucible, it is easy to
integrate historical information as a means to
analyze what happens in that text.
63MORAL/ETHICAL CRITICISM
- Analyzes a text for their moral lessons or to
demonstrate that the texts present examples of
ethics to shape the readers life. - Believes that literature serves the higher
purposeto teach! - Excellence comes with the QUALITY of the lessons
64Questions
- What is the authors message?
- What lessons can you learn from this text?
- How could you avoid the tragic ending of the
character in your own life?
65NEW CRITICISM/STRUCTURALIST CRITICISM
- Includes close readings of the words of a text
and analysis of the relationship between a texts
genre and the meaning of that text. - Most dominant form across the US
- Discussions may center on character development,
use of metaphor to convey meaning, and the
function of epic heroes.
66Questions
- How does the authors use of metaphor affect the
meaning of this text? - Which words in the text contribute to the tone of
the text? - How is theme related to the setting used?
67Literary Analysis Decompression
- Directions Answer the following in complete
sentences. - Which literary theory do you feel will be the
easiest to apply? Why? - Which literary theory do you feel will be the
most difficult to apply? Why? - Write a 3-5 sentence analysis of any text that we
have read thus far using any of the above
theories. You may not use my examples as
answers, but you may use my examples to guide
your response.
68Your Assignment!
- Using your selected novel, choose one Literary
Criticism, and in 3-5 paragraphs apply that
theory to the text. Make sure you use EXAMPLES
FROM THE TEXT to support your answer. Your ECR
will be due the Friday you return from Christmas
break (1/9)if you want to get a jump start!
69Your Assignment!
- Due December 15, 2008.
- A draft should be completed by Monday, December
8, 2005 for a week long editing process. - We will be in the computer lab BRIEFLY on 12/3,
12/5, 12/8 and in the MC 12/4. You will only
have approximately 30 minutes per day so utilize
your time wisely! - Students must bring a copy of their paper to
school EVERY time we are in the lab, or you will
be doing SAT practice exams in the classroom.
70MACBETH PAPER
- 1b) Write a persuasive research paper of 4-7
pages, using a particular critical approach. For
instance, study the historical period of your
work and write an historical criticism or analyze
your text using a feminist point of view.
Another option is to study the authors life and
write a biographical criticism. In your paper, be
sure your thesis persuades the reader to
interpret the text as you have.