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Literary Theories in very brief summary

Literary Theories in very brief summary. Formalist Theory. Nothing outside of the text Independent No outside influences All within context. analyze plot, character, setting, diction, imagery, structure, point of view, form, genre evaluate uses of these forms

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Literary Theories in very brief summary

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  1. Literary Theories in very brief summary

  2. Formalist Theory • Nothing outside of the text • Independent • No outside influences • All within context • analyze plot, character, setting, diction, imagery, structure, point of view, form, genre • evaluate uses of these forms • close reading of passages • emphasis on determining tension and/or ambiguity Connections to Structuralism and Deconstruction

  3. Biographical Theory • knowing the life of the author reveals information in the text • author’s life influenced the text • analyze author’s experiences • analyze author’s process/struggle in writing • emphasis on author’s knowledge Connections to Psychological Theory

  4. Historical Theory Old Historicism • history forms a background to the text • literary text must be read with knowledge and understanding of the time and place of its creation • analyze historical documents contemporary to the text • analyze language of text and its time

  5. Historical Theory New Historicism • text is a reflection of the events, ideas, and attitudes of the time and place of the text’s creation • literary text must be read with social backgrounds and intellectual ideas of the time and place of its creation • analyze political structures of the time and place of the text’s creation • analyze values, conflicts, social events of the time and place of the text’s creation Connections to Psychological and Cultural Theories

  6. Psychological Theory • text is a revelation/product of author’s mind and personality • reflection of the author’s consciousness and mental world • reflects the creative process of the author - imagination • analyze the author’s/character’s motivations and behaviors • interpret the actions of the characters • interpret the intentions of the author • evaluate the text/characters/author as you would a patient * theories tailored from whichever psychological theory preferred Queer Theory and Gender Studies • Connections to: • Psychoanalysis • Jungian symbolism Semiotics

  7. Sociological Theory • social context of the time and place of texts are critical • influences of power relations within society • values and ethics of society • economics, politics, culture are reflected in text • Two major branches within this: • Marxist criticism • Feminist criticism

  8. Sociological Theory Marxist Criticism • applies theory of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to literature • subjugation, exploitation, alienation • bourgeoise versus proletariat • analyze class conflicts • evaluate politics and economics within text • evaluate power structures • acknowledge text as “product” not art form • acknowledge text as part of the revolution

  9. Sociological Theory Feminist Criticism • importance of the social, economic, cultural roles of women in the text • male author’s portrayal of women, female author’s portrayal of women • acknowledge text as “agent for social transformation” or as means of maintaining patriarchal social structures • analyze female characters within the text • evaluate feminine voice(s) in the text Connections to Gender studies

  10. Sociological Theory Feminist Criticism • Focus on four tenets: • Patriarchy of Western Civilization • Gender traits and roles and how they are viewed, imposed, changed • Canon of literature is “androcentric,” male-centered • Traditional analysis of literature is gender-biased in favor of the masculine

  11. Reader-Response Theory • Three perspectives used: • text is a mirror for the reader • focus on the text • “temporal aspect of reading” • focus on the “space” (time and place) between the reader and the text • themes identified by the reader are unique to the reader • focus on the reader, text is background

  12. Reader-Response Theory • text is different for every person, gender, culture, historical period, economic background, class, etcetera • reader’s imagination, identity, and feelings are key, but are regulated by the text • process of reading is important • evaluate your feelings and thoughts as you read a text • analyze the “triggers” in text for your feelings and thoughts • analyze tone and mood • acknowledge differing views of a text between types of readers • subjective information is equal to objective information discovered in a text

  13. Mythological Theory • universal story patterns • common, familiar, universal human experiences • representations of “religious beliefs, social customs, cultural attitudes” • common human events are used for symbolic meanings: • birth = beginning, death = ending, etcetera • Identify, analyze, and evaluate: • Archetypes: universal symbols found in all types of literature throughout history and around the world • Story types: quest, revenge, death, loss, transformation, enlightenment, etcetera • Genres: novel, poem, play, song, short story, proverb, etcetera Connections to Structuralism and Semiotics, linguistic theory of language development

  14. Structuralism • derives from linguistics and anthropology • language as an arbitrary system of signs • focus on “binary opposition” • onomatopoetic use of sounds (pleasant vs. unpleasant, soft vs. harsh, harmony vs. discord) • identify and analyze binary opposites • analyze use of sounds, letters and syllables • evaluate differences in word and sentence structures Connections to Deconstruction

  15. Structuralism Semiotics • study of signs, sign systems, and codes • how signs help in understanding human interaction – literature is only one aspect of this • identify and analyze signs in a text • evaluate signs to guide interpretation of a text • utilize signs of one text to evaluate and interpret other texts

  16. Deconstruction • derives from structuralism • binary opposites are seen as equally valid • reveals prevailing ideologies that are questioned in the text • emphasizes ambiguity in all texts • language is oppositional • all texts are self-contradictory • the meaning of a text is allusive • reduce text to binary oppositions • analyze binary opposites • evaluate ambiguities in text and how they defer meaning

  17. Cultural Studies • multidisciplinary – utilizes all forms of criticism • humanistic disciplines and sciences • culture as a way of life and culture as the best of humanity • focuses on conflict inside and between “cultures” • identify challenges and differences to “accepted” norms and values • evaluate how challenges redraw so-called cultural boundaries • analyze differences of cultures

  18. Cultural Studies Gender Studies • Feminist criticism • Gay/Lesbian studies • identify and analyze how gender is defined in a text • evaluate differences of cultural gender versus biological gender as presented in a text • analyze and evaluate sexual orientation of characters in a text – utilizes psychoanalytic theory • Queer Theory • identify all people/characters as “queer” • acknowledge that there is no such thing as “normal” • evaluate the lack of sexual/gender boundaries

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