Introduction To Literary Theory
Introduction To Literary Theory
Purpose of Course
CLOSE
This course will introduce you to the field of literary theory, a central component of
contemporary studies in English and world literature. As you progress through this
course, you will gain knowledge of the various premises and methods available to
you as a critical reader of literature. You will identify and engage with key questions
that have animated and continue to animate theoretical discussions among
literary scholars and critics, including issues pertaining to ideology, cultural value,
the patriarchal and colonial biases of Western culture and literature, and more. The
structure of this course is historically based, arranged as a genealogy of theoretical
paradigms, beginning in the early 20th century when literary theory first
developed as a formal discipline and following the evolution of literary theory into
the present day. From text-centric Russian formalism to contemporary
gynocriticism and trauma theory, you will explore the basic principles and
preeminent texts that have defined many of the major critical debates surrounding
literature over the past hundred years.
Course Information
CLOSE
Learning Outcomes
CLOSE
define both literary theory and literary criticism, and explain the
emergence of these two fields as a discipline of study;
identify and discuss classical Greek explanations of the purpose
of literature;
explain and account for the rise of literary theory in the
th
20 century, and describe the place of theory in contemporary English
and cultural studies;
provide a brief overview of the major tenets, practitioners, and
ideas stemming from the following critical and theoretical movements
and/or schools: Russian formalism, New
Criticism, structuralism,poststructuralism, semiotics, deconstruction, psych
oanalysis,feminism, gender theory, Marxism, readerresponse paradigms, New Historicism, postcolonialism, ethnic
studies, ecocriticism, chaos theory, andtrauma theory;
identify and discuss some of the viewpoints opposed to the
practice of literary criticism;
discuss contemporary cultural forces influencing some of the
newly emerging trends in literary theory, such as ecocriticism, trauma
theory, and chaos theory; and
identify, discuss, and define some of the key theories of major
literary and cultural critics and theorists, such as (in alphabetical order)
Theodor W. Adorno, Aristotle, J.L. Austin, Mikhail Bakhtin, Roland
Barthes, Simone de Beauvoir, Judith Butler, Hlne Cixous, Jacques
Derrida, Terry Eagleton, T.S. Eliot, Stanely Fish, Michel Foucault,
Sigmund Freud, Henry Louis Gates Jr., Stephen Greenblatt, Edmund
Husserl, Wolfgang Iser, Fredric Jameson, Carl Jung, Julia Kristeva,
Jacques Lacan, Karl Marx, Plato, Ferdinand de Saussure, Eve Kosofsky
Sedgwick, and Victor Shklovsky.
Download Coursepack:
Reading: The Saylor Foudation's "An Introduction to
Literary Theory"