Title: What is literature?
1What is literature?
Any work with a unique aesthetic quality? Texts
that have stood the test of time? Works of the
imagination/creative writing? Works with a
particular set of qualitiese.g., plot,
character, tone, setting, etc.? Works that
emphasize universal themes (i.e., transcend the
merely social or political)? Works that fit
the parameters of literary genres poem, essay,
short story, novel? Anything that is written?
2What is literary theory?
- The capacity to generalize about phenomena and to
develop concepts that form the basis for
interpretation and analysisin this instance, of
a literary text.
3What is literary criticism?
- The disciplined application of theoretical
principles for the purpose of analyzing,
interpreting, and evaluating literary texts.
4THE 4 CRITICAL VARIABLES of LITERARY THEORY
CRITICISM
1. The World
2. The Author
3. The Text
Other Texts
Real World
Beyond the World
Text Ideologically constructed language
ITS CONTEXT
Text Objective reality
Text Symbol,
Archetype
4. The Reader
Gender Studies WORLD/author/text/reader
Postcolonial AUTHOR/world/text/reader Marxist
WORLD/text Territorial TEXT/?reader/
author/world)
Formalism the TEXT (as art) Structuralism the
TEXT (as language system) Psychoanalytic
AUTHOR/READER/text Reader Response
READER/TEXT/community of readers w/shared values
5SOME TRADITIONAL APPROACHES
- Historicalauthors historical moment is key to
understanding a literary text - Biographicalauthors personal experiences are
central to understanding the text - Social realism (?)social transparency is key to
understanding the text
6Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893)
- Applying the scientific method to artassumes
language is factual, reality is absolute, the
truth can be verified. - Taines three major factors for interpreting a
text - Racei.e., national characteristics of the
artists historical place and time - Milieui.e., sum total of artists experience
- Momentintellectual philosophical currents of
artists historical place and time
7Wellek and WarrenTheory of Literature (1949)
- Key issues to understanding a text
- The writers heredity environment (Taines
milieu) - The fictional world of the text vis-à-vis the
world outside the text (Taines race moment - The audience for which the text was intended
8Irresolvable problem with traditional (pre-1970)
social approaches to literary interpretation
- Practitioners assumed that historical,
biographical, and social information could be
accurately gathered and verified. They viewed
language as transparent, facts as reliable,
history as objective. Poststructuralist theories
about the ideological appropriation of language
by dominant groups postmodernist
disillusionment with objective reality both
undermine old-style criticism.
9NEW CRITICISM
- Meaning resides in the textnot in reader,
author, or world - Texts may contain numerous messages, but must
have a unifying central theme created by the
perfect union of all artistic elements. - Texts are artistic creations
- Close reading is the basis of new critical
analysis - The methodology for finding meaning is clear-cut
the tools are unique to literary analysis - one type of formalism
10READER RESPONSE
- Text has many interpretationstext reader
interact to create meaning - Meaning ultimately resides in the readers mind
- or the consensual mind of a community of
readers (this class, for example) - A texts truth is relative
- Readers may reach the same conclusions about a
work--but approach the task quite differently
11STRUCTURALISM
- Meaning resides in the structure of language, not
in art nor in the readers mind - Scientific approach to literary analysis
- structure of language as a logical sign
system determines meaning - Two levels of language langue (the Kings
English) parole (everyday speech) - Interpret a text or part of a text by taking its
language apart (study word derivations, sentence
syntax, etc.)
12POSTSTRUCTURALSOCIAL CRITICISM
13 meaning
meaning
Deconstruction
- Textscomposed of language, an unstable sign
system that always defers meaning. - Truth is constructed, not given, so theres no
such thing as A correct interpretation - Look for an apparent meaning of some aspect of
the text show how the text undermines
(deconstructs) it look again show how the text
undermines the latest interpretation, etc. - Look for oppositions good vs. evil, e.g. Show
how the text undermines first one, then the other
so that good and evil are exposed as empty
concepts
Jacques Derrida
14NEW HISTORICISM
- Literature is one among many socially constructed
texts. If there is a difference, its the
intentional use of the imagination to convey
ideas. - History is every bit as subjective as
intentionally imaginative texts - Purpose of analyzing literature is to locate
hidden social messages, especially those that
promote oppression. - Texts have no final interpretation
- Language, though socially constructed, is stable
enough to be useful. - Find a small intriguing or odd piece of the text
and interpret it by comparing it to contemporary
sign systemsmagazines, newspapers, fads, laws.
Try to locate uses abuses of power.
15POSTCOLONIALISM
- Meaning resides in text, history, and ideology
- Literature is a political toolthose in power
decide what is art - Truth is relative
- Study the authors (and readers) life
times locate tensions between conflicting
cultures explore the double consciousness of
colonized postcolonized writers observe how
colonizers refashion the colonized
16MARXISM
- Meaning resides in text, history, ideology
messages of oppression class conflict - Texts are commodities, not timeless works of art
- Truths are socially constructed.
- Look for evidence of oppressive ideologies of the
dominant social group look for uses abuses of
power
What workers look like to a capitalist
17FEMINIST CRITICISM
- Meaning is socially constructed.
- Texts have more than one interpretation
- Texts are commodities (products of society)
- Truth is relative, highly dependent on arbitrary
categories of difference, esp. those based
on sex and gender - Look for systems of containment for evidence of
repression, oppression, suppression, subversion,
rebellion in texts by women study womens
unique ways of understanding and writing about
the human condition.
18Territorialism
- Possessions (objects of desire) are metaphors for
who we are or how we wish to be perceivedaspects
of the self. - Possessions may be tangible or intangible (my car
or my idea, e.g.) - They occupy mental space cognitive, affective,
and conative. - These spaces strongly resemble territorieswith
rights of ownership, markers, boundaries, rules
of in and out, defensive strategies, etc. - Look for territorial behaviors determine the
object(s) of desire what aspect of self is in
play? Who owns the object? Who wants it? Why?
Identify the territorial act acquisition,
management, or defense? How does this information
improve our understanding of the text?