Literary Theory For Beginners
By Mary Klages, Frank Reynoso and Bill Brown
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About this ebook
Have you heard the terms structuralism and deconstruction and postmodernism but aren’t really sure what they mean? Have you taken a whole course on literary criticism but are still feeling lost? Here’s the book you need to sort it all out—and enjoy doing so!
In Literary Theory For Beginners, Mary Klages takes you into her classroom, cuts through the jargon, and explains the ABCs (and the DEFs as well) in terms you can get your head around. Her breadth of knowledge, her unique skills as a teacher, and the delightful illustrations of Frank Reynoso help us understand why literature matters, how it affects us, and how it reflects history, culture, and diversity. Here are ways of thinking about literature—not just reading it—methods of study and frameworks of interpretation from classical humanism all the way up to psychoanalysis, gender and queer theory, race, postcolonialism, and, yes, postmodernism
With wit and wisdom, Klages takes on the two most frequently asked questions about literature and makes it all fun:
- What does the work MEAN? (What is the deeper, hidden, or symbolic meaning? Did the author intend all these meanings? Are any and all meanings present in the text? Are all meanings equally valid?)
- What does the work DO? (Why is literature important? What effect does it have on the reader? How can literature be a force for social change?)
So sit back, relax, and take it all in!
Mary Klages
Mary Klages is an associate professor in the English Department of the University of Colorado at Boulder. She is the author of Literary Theory: A Guide for the Perplexed(Continuum, 2006) and Key Terms in Literary Theory (Continuum, 2012), as well as scholarly works in the fields of American literary history and Disability Studies. Visit her at http://english.colorado.edu/mary-klages/.
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Reviews for Literary Theory For Beginners
12 ratings3 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a mixed bag. Some appreciate its accessibility and relevance to language and literature, recommending it to students. Others, however, feel that it reads more like a lecture and is too dense, lacking smooth transitions. The last 80 pages are easier to read and provide concise and relevant information, but some readers wish for more discussion on intersectionality and interdisciplinary themes. Overall, it is not recommended for beginners but may be suitable for college students midway through a 101 course.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5What I really love about this book is that it speaks the language of an ordinary reader. I recommend this to students who are interested in language and literature.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Read this as a refresher. Didn't disappoint! Easily-accessible and digestible, considering the material.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I wanted to refresher on lit theories; however, this book felt more like a lecture than an intro book. Too dense without decent transitions.
Gave it 2.5 stars because the last 80 pages were a much easier read. Concise, gave relevant info, was able to see the threads. I wish the author had talked about intersectionality and interdisciplinary themes more. Too many boxed concepts when many worked together.
Don't recommend for beginners or people just needing a refresher. Good for college students midway through a 101 course.
Book preview
Literary Theory For Beginners - Mary Klages
Chapter 1
HUMANIST LITERARY THEORY
(and Other Old-Fashioned Topics)
Let's start with a quick overview of the past 2,000 years of literary theory.
We'll begin at the foundations of Western culture: the Greeks. Both Plato and Aristotle thought that literature (lyric and dramatic poetry and drama, no novels yet!) should be MIMETIC—a poem is a copy, representation, or imitation of something that exists in nature. By this logic, a good poem would be a poem that is accurate in copying nature.
For Plato, this was a problem. Plato argued that the natural world is itself only a copy of an ideal world of forms that exists in the abstract. Since only the ideal/eternal Forms can be perfect, the natural world is flawed and imperfect. A poem, then, is a copy of a copy, so doubly flawed. Thus, Plato banned poets from his Republic, because they told lies.
Plato
Aristotle wasn't quite so stern. His writings focus on the natural world (rather than abstract forms) in order to describe and classify all phenomena in it. So Aristotle didn't worry about mimesis so much. He believed that poetry and art could imitate the natural world, but that they add something in doing so—they make real world happenings have MEANING for audiences. Aristotle's idea is that art serves as supplement to the real world; it's a way of representing the real world that helps audiences better understand it.
The emphasis on MIMESIS raised problems, as you might see. Can a poet write about things not found in nature? What about imagination? Is nature out there
for us to copy, or do we create nature
in the act of writing about it?
Plato and Aristotle were the main voices in lit theory until the early modern age (Renaissance and after). In the 17th century, English philosopher John Locke asserted that the mind is a tabula rasa, or blank slate, until sensory perception puts experiences into our brains, which we then sort and collect and make sense of. Nothing exists in our minds, Locke maintained, except what comes through that sensory perception (and the secondary processes of ordering and drawing conclusions from it—which form consciousness). For literature, this meant that writers should focus on descriptions of the external world, trying to use words to replace sensory perceptions to fill up a mind seen as passive, like a sponge. Good literature was that which put good thoughts into your head.
The function of literature, from this perspective, is DIDACTIC—literature should tell you how to think correctly about people and things and the world in general. Good
literature tells you good things; bad literature tells you bad, wrong, immoral things.
In the 18th century, philosophers began to refigure their concepts of the human mind, moving away from Locke's tabula rasa to the idea that the mind actively shapes and interprets sense data. Rather, they posited a constitutive imagination,
or the mind's ability to create ideas whose whole is greater than the sum of their parts. A poem, then, didn't have to be a copy of nature, or of sense impressions—poets could make things up, imagine them, and then write down what they imagined.
As you might agree, this was a great development for literature and art! The purpose of art as imitating nature gave way to the idea of art as CREATION—and thus of the artist as a kind of God.
This gave rise, by the end of the 18th century, to the Romantic era and the idea that literature is an expression of an inner truth, a deeper meaning.
The function of literature, in the Romantic view, is to be EXPRESSIVE of the complexity of the artist's inner feelings and thoughts, which could not be expressed any other way.
Good literature, though, was not just expressive—the author spilling his guts/vomiting on the page. It also had to be AFFECTIVE. It had to move the reader, get the reader to feel powerful emotions aroused by the author's words. Aristotle had articulated this function of literature in his discussion of catharsis (emotional purging) in tragedy.
The expressive and affective aspects of literature formed the basis for most literary study from the Romantic era until the last decades of the 20th century. This is what we call humanist literary theory.
Expressive and affective literary theory put new emphasis on the Author as creator—it's MY inner experience I have to express. This model also placed new emphasis on the Reader as the recipient of the author's creative genius and tortured emotions. This, too, contributed to the attention paid to what literature does.
Among the things a poem could do for, or give to, a reader:
moral improvement
knowledge/education of fact and history
pleasure
psychological insight
catharsis
an approach to the sublime (God, the divine, the inexpressible/unsayable)
aesthetic appreciation
Each of these attributes or benefits gave rise to a branch of literary criticism and theory, including a method for evaluating what literature is good or great, and what is crap.
One other notable method developed in the early 20th century in Anglo American literary thought: FORMALISM, or what was then called New Criticism. Formalism rejected any analysis of the author or the reader, any expressive or affective notions of the function of literature. For formalists, a literary work is words on a page, nothing else. The job of the literature student or literary critic, they maintained, is to understand how the words on a page create meaning (real meaning, deeper meaning) without reference to anything outside the text. Formalism considered itself the only objective way of viewing a literary text; hence it became the main method taught by English departments. Academic pursuits, it was believed, should be modeled on the sciences; they should be objective, measurable, and fully explicable. Literary studies are often in danger of being called subjective,
because they are based on personal taste or individual interpretation, rather than on objective fact.
To sum up: The humanist model presupposes that great literature is...
a unique creation coming from the most profound inner experiences of an author
a creation that can move readers emotionally and intellectually, to get them to understand themselves better
a means of raising consciousness, for getting readers to think about themselves and the world differently
a work that withstands the test of time
—that speaks to all periods of history and all cultures because it addresses ideas and events common to all people at all times in all cultures
an expression of universal human truth
unaffected by history, ethnicity, geography, or anything else external to the text. The assumption is that human nature is unchanging, that people are pretty much the same everywhere, in all ages and all cultures, and that we
all share something by virtue of our common humanity.
The humanist ideal of great
literature also supports the idea of an individual self
to which great literature speaks—the inner truths that make us who we are, our essential self. Even though all humans are essentially the same, sharing a common humanity, each one of us (in Western culture, anyway) is a unique individual, like no one else who has ever existed.
Now forget all that.
Chapter 2
STRUCTURALISM
The formalist method insists that a text makes its own meaning, without reference to the reader, the author, the morality, or the external world (or history or cultural formation of any kind). What you do in analyzing a text is close reading
—looking at each word, phrase, sentence, or other element and deciding how that element contributes to the unified meaning of the whole piece. Such close reading is still one of the basic skills of reading literature; no interpretation of a text can be valid without evidence from the text to support it.
The quest for textual evidence to support an argument about a literary text may sound more like science than English. The critics who developed formalism in England and the United States in the 1940s were trying to make literary criticism more scientific, to take it out of the realm of mere personal responses. They wanted a more scientific or objective approach to reading literature because science was considered the hallmark of true knowledge.
This may strike some of us as disappointing. What we find valuable in literature, the reasons why we study it, have more to do with subjective responses than objective analysis. We love literature because it speaks to us—a great literary work is one that withstands the test of time
and that resonates with us personally and affectively even though it was written hundreds of years ago. Within the humanist model of literature, what is valuable to us in lit is that it expresses universal human truths, ideas about the mind, the soul, about life and death, about youth, age, and experiences that are common to all people in every time and culture.
But at the end of the last chapter, I told you to forget all that.
When we talk about literary theory,
we're talking about a development that didn't really begin until the second half of the 20th century, when the humanist approach—the idea that great literature can make you a better human being (more compassionate, more understanding)—seemed inadequate in the face of the Holocaust and the atom bomb. Literary theory evolved, in part, from a rejection of humanist ideas about literature and a turn toward other ways of thinking about what literature does and how it makes meaning.
Structuralism is one of those ways. We're starting with structuralism because a lot of the theories in this book follow from structuralist ideas—which is why they are called post-structuralist theories.
Structuralism is a way of thinking about the world that seeks out the basic units of any structure or system. In this sense, it's like science, which posits the atom as the basic unit of which all matter is composed. Structuralists look at the interrelation between such basic units and the rules that govern how those units can combine. In science, the units are atoms, and the rules for combining them is what we call chemistry.
So, think about Tinkertoys. The basic units are plastic rods and wheels with holes; the rule for combining them is that rods go into holes. That's the structure of Tinkertoys—everything you can make out of them (a building, a race car, a windmill) is made by using the units according to the rules. Structuralist analysis isn't interested in what you build, only in how the system of Tinkertoys allows you to build by using the units according to the rules. Structuralism looks only at the structure of something, not at the content.
How does this work in literary theory? Well, what's the basic unit
of a piece of literature? Right, a word! And what do we call the rules for putting words