The document provides an introduction to literary criticism and theory, explaining that criticism involves analyzing designated literary texts while theory offers perspectives on defining and understanding literature. It also outlines some major developments in literary theory like the shift from author-focused to reader-focused criticism and surveys different theoretical approaches like classical, formalist, and postmodern theories. The document discusses how theory can inform teaching literature by exposing students to different interpretations and helping them actively engage with texts.
The document provides an introduction to literary criticism and theory, explaining that criticism involves analyzing designated literary texts while theory offers perspectives on defining and understanding literature. It also outlines some major developments in literary theory like the shift from author-focused to reader-focused criticism and surveys different theoretical approaches like classical, formalist, and postmodern theories. The document discusses how theory can inform teaching literature by exposing students to different interpretations and helping them actively engage with texts.
Literary Criticism LESSON 01 – INTRODUCTION PREPARED BY MR. JONATHAN M. AYSON 1 Literary Theory 2
Literary theory, or theories, can offer various ways of
defining literature. Literary theory does not offer any easy solutions as to what literature is, or what its study should be, but this should not be taken as a negative feature. Literary theory intends to explain or demystify some of the assumptions or values implicit in literature and literary criticism. 2 Literary Criticism and 3 Literary Theory Literary criticism involves the reading, interpretation, and commentary of a specific text or texts which have been designated as literature. Two conventions or assumptions which tend to be inherent in its practice are: (a) that criticism is secondary to literature itself and dependent on it: criticism is posterior to the literary texts and (b) that critical interpretations or judgments seem to assume that the literary text which they are addressing is unquestionably literature: that literature is a natural, self-evident category. 4 Literary criticism involves the reading, analysis, explication, and interpretation of texts which are designated literary, then literary theory should do two things: (a) it ought to provide us with a range of criteria for identifying literature in the first place, and an awareness of these criteria should inform our critical practice and (b) it should make us aware of the methods and procedures which we employ in the practice of literary criticism, so that we not only interrogate the text but also the ways in which we read and interpret the text. Literary criticism is best understood as an application of a theory to specific texts (praxis- theory put into practice) 5 Literary theory also addresses questions of what makes literary language literary, as well as the structures of literary language and literary texts, and how these work. Literary theory is concerned also with the study of the function of the literary text in social and cultural terms, which in turn leads to a consideration of its value. 3 Developments in Literary/Critical Theory 6 and the practice of Literary Criticism Most criticism prior to the 1950’s could be described author-centered. In the 1940’s and 1950’s a number of critics argued that attention should be focused primarily on the literary work or text and not the author: they suggested the critic’s main concern was with the language and form of the text being read not with the author. More recently, a number of theorists have introduced a particular area of literary theory usually known as “reader theory” or “reception theory”: focusing on the reader as the central figure in the reading and critical process. 7
The contemporary literary theory stresses the
following: Critic-tourist guide Literary pieces-places you want to visit because you find them fascinating/interesting Critical/Literary-tourist agency The question to ask in contemporary literary criticism is no longer: Is the text good?-this is text-oriented rather: The text is good for who?-reader-oriented In contemporary literary theory, one assumes that the author is dead (Roland Barthes). 4 Literary Theory and 8 Literature Teaching How can literary theory inform our teaching of literature? Recognize that readers make something of the text, create something in the process of reading and what they create depends not only on the text itself but also on who the readers are and what they bring with them to the reading. Invite students to confront the text as openly and directly as possible, so that they might be more likely to find their own unique responses to it. Ask students to sense their own questions, to stay alert so they may find their own ways into the text. 9 Have them to take a point of view within a work and fill in its “empty” spaces. Ask them to reflect upon the many conspicuous silences in literary text. Carefully direct reading/writing assignment to lead students to re-see a literary work so they may reflect on and write about how they read and make meaning of a literary text. Make use of literary theories to formulate thought- provoking and challenging questions. Expose students to different readings of a literary text. 5 A Survey of 10 the Literary Theories Classical Theory This theory is premised on the idea that literature is an imitation of life. It mirrors life, the reality that we know. It is interested in looking at literature based on: Mimesis (Plato) – Mimesis is the Greek word for imitation. We try to see whether a piece of work is mimetic. If it is, what is imitated? How is the imitation done? Function (Horace) – Function refers to whether a piece of literature seeks to entertain or to teach. 11 Style (Longinus) – Style refers to whether a piece of literature was written in a low, middle or high style. Catharsis (Aristotle) – Catharsis refers to purgation, purification, classification, or structural. The idea of catharsis relates, too, to a purging of negative emotions, like pity and fear. Censorship (Plato) – Censorship is an issue here since what is literature might not be good for the readers. References 12
Cruz, I. ed. (1990). Readings in contemporary criticism.
Manila: DLSU.
Montealegre, A. (2003). Applying literary theories in
the major genres. Manila: Philippine Normal University.