Some
Critical Approaches to Literature
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Table
of Contents
What
is "criticism"?
What
are the components of criticism?
Some
Critical Approaches to Literature
Typical
Literary Assignments
A
Note on Developing Your Essay: Beware of Summary!
What
is "criticism"?
In a popular sense,
"criticism" means "judgment," and the assumption usually is that what is
being called for in the act of criticism is to "point out the failures"
of something. Judgments, of course, can be favorable as well as unfavorable.
"Criticism," however,
is much more than rendering a verdict. Many other factors must be taken
into consideration when making a judgment. An affirmation or rejection
really represents just the end of a much more complicated process.
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What are the components
of criticism?
The process of criticism
involves the following steps:
1) Learning
the basics
In the criticism
of literature, the "basics" include knowledge of the elements of literature
such as character, action, types of literature, conflict, plot, motif,
symbol, language, image, rhetorical patterns in prose and poetry, narrative
line, time and setting, and
theme. Without a vocabulary
for discussing literature, any kind of justifiable response (other than
a purely emotional reaction) is all but impossible. So the first step in
literary criticism is familiarization with basic concepts.
2) Analyzing
literary elements
The process of analysis
is identifying, clarifying, defining, and isolating the distinctive
parts of a subject. You should be able to identify, for example, primary
and
secondary characters, that is, those who control the action vs. those
characters which play only subordinate or supporting roles. You should
be alert to recurring image patterns and be able to classify them by types
such as "nature" images or "color" images, etc.
3) Interpreting
the literature
To interpret a literary
work is to explain "what it means." Meaning in literature may be a point
an author either states (maybe through a character) or implies (perhaps
through images that become symbols). When Huckleberry Finn refuses to go
back to St. Petersburg at the end of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,
we sense, as careful readers, that Huck has grown as a person and can no
longer justify the racism and inhumanity that he has left behind. So we
might say that the "meaning of the story" is "the necessity to live with
integrity," or "the evils of racism," or perhaps "Huck growing up."
Each of these broad observations or generalizations constitute possible
"themes" of the story.
Sometimes the meaning
may be a concept "demonstrated" by what happens and how it
happens in a work like "realism" or "naturalism." Sometimes meaning evolves
or unfolds gradually throughout a work as more an more details are revealed.
You should be able to identify statements from characters which seem to
sum up a point an author may be making about what's going on inside
the literature or outside the literature. Sometimes stated, just
as often implied, such generalizations are called "themes."
4) Judging
the literature
While each of us
tends quickly to jump to judgment--we want to say right away whether we
like or dislike something, we all know that anyone can rip off an opinion
or judgment without it meaning very much. To make a meaningful evaluation,
however, assumes that 1) we know what we're talking about (we have learned
the basics), 2) we have a thorough grasp of the details of a work and
their relationships to each other (we have analyzed the elements),
and 3) we have a sense of the author's stated or intended meanings developed
in a literary work (we have interpreted the work from the author's perspective).
Only if we have met these three conditions can we really make a significant
judgment.
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Some
"Critical Approaches" to Literature
A "critical approach"
is a study of a literary work from a single perspective. You might write
a paper analyzing and characterizing the type of work (a genre approach)
or an essay interpreting the meaning of the story from the point of view
of a Jungian psychologist ( a psychological approach). You could
explore how certain nineteenth-century events help determine the narrative
line of a novel (an historical approach), or you might be called
upon to explain the significance of Christian imagery in a poem (a religious
or symbolic approach).
There are many possible
"critical approaches," then, to the study of literature. Why we make such
investigations is because of the complexity of literary works. Every possible
human experience, emotion, and relationship can find expression in imaginative
literature. No single perspective can account for such complexity. In A
Handbook of Critical Approaches to Literature (1967), Wilfred Guerin
compares a literary work to a finely cut gemstone. It is impossible to
view the entire piece from any one angle, that is, from any one perspective.
Rather, it must be turned, ever so slowly, from one angle to another before
the fine nuances of the whole stone can be more fully appreciated.
One example might
help clarify Guerin's metaphor. A study of Nathaniel Hawthorne's short
story, "Young Goodman Brown, " generates a variety of interpretations,
each determined by the critical approach taken. From the genre approach,
the story reflects a rather familiar "Christian allegory" in which every
element of the story is meant to be read symbolically. As such, the story
would seem to convey a distinctively Christian theme: "Like Young Goodman
Brown (the main character), we, too, might be 'saved,' by 'looking to heaven'
and 'resist[ing] the wicked one.'" On the other hand, from an historical
perspective which places the tale in New England's Salem Village during
the 1692 "witchcraft trials and hysteria," Brown is nothing like a mentor
for emulation, but comes off, rather, as a naive fool; as a member of that
community, he, like others at the time, should have doubted what was obviously
"spectral evidence" in his condemnation of others. Clearly, we can gain
a more rewarding appreciation of a work only by suspending our judgment
until we have examined it from at least several points of view.
Any critical approach
to a literary work will derive a reliable judgment only after a full examination
from that particular perspective. In other words, we will suspend judgment
until we have, first, learned the basic concepts belonging to that approach;
second, analyzed the related elements within the work; and third, formulated
an interpretation based upon a very close reading of the work from that
limited point of view. Only then should we render a verdict on the work.
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Typical
Literary Assignments
While it is possible,
of course, to take an investigation of a piece of imaginative literature
through the full cycle of steps from any perspective like the critical
approaches introduced above, most undergraduate assignments will stop short
of a fully developed criticism. You may be asked only to analyze
some aspect or to interpret a work. Such exercises might include
assignments like the following:
Analysis
Explain how
the author uses color images to . . .
Identify
key characters in . . .
Compare/contrast
the effects of the ending rhyme patterns in three sonnets by . . .
Describe
the central conflict in . . .
Interpretation
Identify two themes
in . . .
Explain why
the author has chosen to . . .
Discuss the possible
meanings
of the clothing in . . .
The message
for a contemporary audience might be that . . .
Interpret
the symbolism in the author's use of . . .
Evaluation
Explain why
the images support the theme of the . . .
Explain why
one work makes better use of . . . than the other
Discuss your reason
for . . .
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A Note
on Developing Your Essay: Beware of Summary!
Only immature papers
fall into simply summarizing a literary work (unless, of course, that is
what the instructions for the assignment have directed you to do specifically).
When developing your paper, assume that the reader is already familiar
with the text. You don't have to retell the narrative line from start to
finish. On the other hand, you can introduce your approach directly and
make references to supporting passages from the work in the body of your
paper, confident that your reader will understand them and, with you, appreciate
their importance as supporting examples. See the sample paper, "Tragedy
and the Ethic of Responsibility."
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This page was
last modified on March 14, 2004,
and is maintained by Dr.
Geoffrey Grimes.

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