~~ Critical Approaches to Literature ~~
"It's inevitable that people will ponder, discuss, and
analyze the works of art that interest them."
X.J. Kennedy and Dana Gioia,
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama
Standard critical thinking tools, so useful elsewhere, are
readily adaptable to the study of literature. It's possible to analyze,
question, interpret, synthesize, and evaluate the literary works you
read in the course of pondering, analyzing and discussing them.
Literary criticism is the field of study which systematizes this sort
of activity, and several critical approaches to literature are
possible. Some of the more popular ones, along with their basic
tenants, are listed below:
FORMALIST
CRITICISM
- Literature
is a form of knowledge with intrinsic elements--style, structure,
imagery, tone, genre.
- What
gives a literary work status as art, or as a great work of art, is how
all of its elements work together to create the reader's total experience
(thought, feeling, gut reactions, etc.)
- The
appreciation of literature as an art requires close reading--a careful,
step-by-step analysis and explication of the text (the language of the
work). An analysis may follow from questions like, how do various
elements work together to shape the effect on the reader?
- Style
and theme influence eachother and can't be separated if meaning is to
be retained. It's this interdependence in form and content that makes a
text "literary." "Extracting" elements in isolation (theme, character,
ploy, setting, etc.) may destroy a reader's aesthetic experience of the
whole.
- Formalist
critics don't deny the historical, political situation of a work, they
just believe works of art have the power to transcend by being "organic
wholes"--akin to a being with a life of its own.
- Formalist
criticism is evaluative in that it differentiates great works of art
from poor works of art. Other kinds of criticism don't necessarily
concern themselves with this distinction.
- Formalist
criticism is decidedly a "scientific" approach to literary analysis,
focusiing on "facts amenable to "verification" (evidence in the text).
BIOGRAPHICAL
CRITICISM
- Real
life experience can help shape (either directly or indirectly) an
author's work.
- Understanding
an author's life can help us better understand the work.
- Facts
from the author's life are used to help the reader better understand
the work; the focus is always on the literary work under investigation.
HISTORICAL
CRITICISM
- Historical
criticism investigates the social, cultural, and intellectual context
that produced it. This investigation includes the author's biography
and the social milieu.
- Historical
criticism often seeks to understand the impact of a work in its day,
and it may also explore how meanings change over time.
- Historical
criticism expolores how time and place of creation affect meaning in
the work.
PSYCHOLOGICAL
CRITICISM
- These
critics hold the belief that great literature truthfully reflects life
and is a realistic representation of human motivation and behavior.
- Psychological
critics may choose to focus on the creative process of the artist, the
artist's motivation or behavior, or analyze fictional characters'
motivations and behaviors.
MYTHOLOGICAL
CRITICISM
- Mythological
criticism studies recurrent universal patterns underlying most literary
works (for example, "the hero's journey").
- It
combines insights from a variety of academic disciplines--anthropology,
psychology, history, comparative religion...it concerns itself with
demonstrating how the individual imagination shares a common humanity
by identifying common symbols, images, plots, etc.
- Mythological
critics identify "archetypes" (symbols, characters, situations, or
images evoking a universal response).
MARXIST (SOCIOLOGICAL) CRITICISM
- These
critics examine literature in its cultural, economic, and political
context; they explore the relation between the artist and the
soceity--how might the profession of authorship have affected what's
been written?
- It is
concerned with the social content of literary works, pursuing such
questions as: What cultural, economic or political values does the text
implicitly or explicitly promote? What is the role of the audience in
shaping what's been written?
- Marxist
critics assume that all art is political.
- Marxist
critics judge a work's "ideology"--giving rise to such terms as
"political correctness."
READER-RESPONSE
CRITICISM
- This
type of criticism attempts to describe the internal workings of the
reader's mental processes. it recognizes reading as a creative act, a
creative process.
- No
text is self-contained, independent of a reader's interpretive design.
- The
plurality of readings possible are all explored. Critics study how
different readers see the same text differently, and how religious,
cultural, and social values affect readings.
- Instead
of focusing only on the values embedded in the text, this type of
criticism studies the values embedded in the reader. Intersections
between the two are explored.
DECONSTRUCTIVE
CRITICISM
- Deconstructive
critics believe that language doesn't accurately reflect reality
becuase it's an unstable medium; literary texts therefore have no
stable meaning.
- Deconstructive
criticism resembles formalist criticism in its close attention to the
text, its close analysis of individual words and images. There the
similarity ends, because their aims are in fact opposite. Whereas
formalist criticism is interested in "aesthetic wholes" or constructs,
deconstructionists aim to demonstrate irreconcilable positions--they destruct
(or deconstruct)--by proving the instability of language, its inability
to express anything definte.