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Literary Theory

Literary Theory. Dichotomizing Ordinary Language and Literary Language. Ordinary Language Literary Language . Meaning determinate ever-changing . Ambiguity problem goal . Surface form means to end end . Domain universals particulars . Analysis necessary; . try to complete interference; .

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Literary Theory

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  1. Literary Theory • Dichotomizing Ordinary Language and Literary Language

  2. Ordinary Language Literary Language

  3. Meaning determinate ever-changing

  4. Ambiguity problem goal

  5. Surface form means to end end

  6. Domain universals particulars

  7. Analysis necessary;

  8. try to complete interference;

  9. never exhaust

  10. Purpose communication expression

  11. Rationality rational irrational

  12. Truth correspondence coherence

  13. Disciplines linguistics; cognitive psychology; artificial intelligence; sociology; anthropology literary criticism; poetics' rhetoric; stylistics; literary history; aesthetics

  14. Anti-Realism • Graff: literature defamiliarizes reality; criticism defamiliarizes literature

  15. Poirier: Literature has only one responsibility--to be compelled and compelling about its own inventions

  16. Bloom: A theory of poetry must belong to poetry, must be poetry, before it can be of any use in interpreting poems.

  17. Scholes: Once we knew that fiction was about life and criticism was about fiction--and everything was simple. Now we know that fiction is about other fiction, is criticism in fact, or metafiction. And we know that criticism is about the impossibility of anything being about life, really, or even about fiction, or, finally, about anything. Criticism has taken the very idea of "aboutness" away from us. It has taught us that language is tautological, if it is not nonsense, and to the extent that it is about anything it is about itself. Mathematics is about mathematics, poetry is about poetry and criticism is about the impossibility of its own existence

  18. Tallis: degrees of realism • Meyer L. Abrams (The Mirror & the Lamp)

  19. Freund, 1987, p. 2: subversion of triangle by focusing on audience • Reader Response History

  20. return to reader • resee language as power • I. A. Richards (1929)

  21. We are often compelled, for example, to say things about the poem, or the words in it, which are only true of the effects of the poem on the minds of its readers... We speak of the poem’s beauty instead of entering upon elaborate and speculative analyses of its effect upon us... we come temporarily to think that the virtues of a poem lie not in its power over us, but in its own structure and conformation as an assemblage of verbal sounds

  22. technical v. critical remarks • Jonathan Culler: structure => theory of reading (Freund, p. 79) • Stanley Fish: interpretive community

  23. but cf. Mary Louise Pratt: linguistics of contact • Norman Holland: psychoanalytic criticism • Roman Ingarden: phenomenological: intentional creation of text • Wolfgang Iser: reception theory • Implied Reader (Tompkins); Act of Reading (Suleiman & C) • art as defamiliarizing • situated evaluation figures • hermeneutic circle • illusion-making • dialectical structure of reading • Gestalt psychology: the shifting blank • Social Interaction Model • "Freckle Juice": my entry point

  24. stories as recountings of events

  25. summaries as desired end points

  26. the main idea • Impoverished view of author-reader relationship

  27. presence of author/reader

  28. dynamic relationship

  29. multiple roles

  30. interactions of author/reader • Rip Van Winkle: intro • Sokolov: multiple embedding • McPhee (Pine Barrens): • Homer (Odyssey) • Balzac (S/Z): "as though" • Potter: "am sorry" • McPhee (Bark Canoe): roles • Kundera: I understood • purposes

  31. Romantic (focus on author; author's meaning)

  32. Mid-1700s • breakdown of patronage system • commercial printing • large reading public • mass education/standardization

  33. unknown reader => shift to author • direct to psychic life of individuals; indirect good • Shelly: Eternal poets scorn to affect a moral aim • deification of poetry

  34. => ordinary language v literary language • New Criticism (focus on text; formal properties) • competition from science • Brooks & Warren: Study poetry as poetry • A poem should not mean but be

  35. Anti-realism: Self-sufficient world; not mere representation

  36. Wellek & Warren: The statements in a novel, in a poem, in a drama are not literally true => not logical propositions

  37. Coleridge: That willing suspension of disbelief that constitutes poetic faith

  38. Wimsatt & Beardsley: intentional fallacy; affective fallacy

  39. Rhetoric of inquiry • appeal to objective authority & denunciation of rhetoric => one of most effective rhetorical strategies available • unity: all fields are rhetorical • Donald McCloskey: economics • Clifford Geertz, James Clifford, George Marcus, Mary Louise Pratt, Renato Rosaldo: anthropology • Charles Bazerman, Bruno Latour, Stephen Woolgar, Michael Lynch: science • Gerd Gigerenzer, David Murray: statistics in social sciences

  40. Susan Peck McDonald, Robert Scholes, Terry Eagleton: literary theory

  41. Hayden White, Allan Megill: history

  42. David Klemm: theology

  43. Mark Kelman, Catherine McKinnon: law

  44. diversity: special devices linked to key questions in each field

  45. Ethnography (M L Pratt)

  46. cover (Stephen Tyler in India)

  47. ethnography as science

  48. Malinowski quote, p. 27

  49. (Clifford: “impossible attempt to fuse objective & subjective practices)

  50. travel writing: narration/description

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