Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Literary Study For Dummies Essays - Literary Criticism,
  Literary Study For Dummies  A Modified Version of R. L. McGuire's Passionate Attention: an introduction to  literary study. Literature and criticism Authors basic assumption of a book- the  reading and the study of literature cannot and do not take place outside the  context of human values. One's unique personal experiences are from whence their  values are formed. These values come to light as a reader reads or a writer  writes. Literature is a record of specific personal perceptions: H.    Read-"the outer image of inward things". Literature proves the  richness not the limitations of being human. Literary criticism is  discernment-the ability to see. The student needs to form their own critical  criteria and offer an interpretation of the work based on those criteria.    Judgmental reviewing is narrow and only one aspect of literary criticism. The  value of criticism is not that it lays down laws that any reader must follow,  but that it offers a new way of seeing a literary work, which may not have been  possible to the reader. For example in the critical analysis of a poem the  reader might look for the connections between words, stanzas, structure and  ideas. The four basic approaches to literary criticism are: 1) the mimetic 2)  the pragmatic 3) the expressive 4) the objective Mimetic approach- describes the  relationship of the literary work to the world or the universe in which the work  was conceived or being read. Pragmatic approach- describes the effects of the  work on its audience. Williams 2 Expressive approach- proposes the study of the  relationship of the work to the writer: biographical, psychological, history,  culture. Objective approach- is that which studies the work in and for itself  without reference to the world in which it exists, its effect on its readers, or  the works relationship to the author. The work for itself Objective criticism-  the study of a literary work is done without reference to the mimetic,  pragmatic, or expressive possibilities of interpretation. This type of criticism  regards the literary work as an object in and for itself because it is art and  the work of an individual artist. The literary work is a craft, a constructed  pattern of words, and the basis for our speculations, for its truth, its  revelation, and its power. Descriptive Critical Activities- seeks primarily to  describe a text. It is the approach to the work for itself in its simplest form.    It is employed on revisions, editions, and on the finished version. Concern lies  with the resulting product and its theme or central idea. Generic criticism-  study of the work for itself, the types of literature this criticism employs is  poems, novels, and plays. The study of poetics or prosody is the learning of  basic metrical patterns and verbal effects: iambic, tetrameter, couplets,  alliteration, rhyme, etc.... This type of study serves to remind us of a vital  aspect of the writers' art. The writer is a craftsman of sound and effect as  well as ideas. Keep in mind that writers can be conventional or unconventional.    Thematic approach- attempts to bring the various aspects of form as well as  content together to make a statement about the subject of a work. It may also  concern itself with the message or moral of that work. Unity- if a literary work  can generate its own meaning by virtue of its internal coherence, then a  critical method can concern itself with that esthetic universe. Unity of Theme-  all of the work is about the same topic. Unity of Imagery- all the images  contribute to the same general vision, implication, theme, or central image.    Williams 3 Unity of Tone & Form- the parts of the work fit together and  support each other. According to Coleridge, "But if the definition sought  for be that of legitimate poem, I answer, it must be one, the parts of which  mutually support and explain each other; all in their proportion harmonizing  with, and supporting the purpose and known influences of metrical arrangement..  ."(McGuire 22). New criticism- shows interconnections with emphasis on the  work. Mimetic-Mimesis-Imitation Mimetic criticism- is that which asks how a  literary work is important to any of the worlds to which it is related. The best  place to begin a survey of mimetic approaches is with the connection between the  work and the time in which it was written. Guideline 1) discover the extent of  the departure or conformity of the work from the era/culture in which it was  produced. This teaches the student the values of the age in which the work was  written. This entails immersion in the    
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