What Is Literary Theory
What Is Literary Theory
What Is Literary Theory
By Roger Webster
Literature and literary theory
The term literature is frequently used in ways which would suggest that
it is not a problematic concept. We can see differences emerging
regarding this term; such differences are often clearly observable
between academia and popular institutions, but also within academia.
The differences are not only cultural but also historical.
The late XIX century is a good illustration of one of the main ways in
which English (rather than British) academic culture sought to
homogenize and organicize the study of literature. The English
Association sought to develop the study of an English literary culture
in educational institutions. Matthew Arnolds view of culture as the best
that is thought and known in the world was to be implemented
through the medium of literature: the study of the classics and poetry.
Some critics have argued that the study of literature and the cultural
institution of English became substitutes for established religion,
which was showing weakness during that period. Literature offered a
similar kind of experience and it was important that the state instilled
(introduced gradually) appropriate civilized values.
Literature is, and has been, historically in a state of flux (flow). As terms,
literature and literary have complex and plural meanings.
Literary theory or theories offer various ways of thinking about what the
issues might be in attempting any kind of definition for literature. Two
important concepts arise from literary theory:
1- Literature becomes a problematic and heterogeneous area
regarding the ways in which it functions culturally and historically
as a form of writing and knowledge.
2- The activities associated with the study of literature, from reading
to criticism, need to be constantly reassessed.
The implied author (Wayne): It implies the way the sense of an author
inheres in a text.
Work and text:
Text:
The author is not seen as the main producer of the text, no ris he
necessarily to be identified with it. The author too is a textual product or
effect: it is the language that speaks, not the author.
Literary texts are networks of meaning, composed of various discourses.
It is irreductible and open to repeated readings and reinterpretations.
Barthes sees meaning as generated by language. He would use text
in its widest sense.
Work:
It has the sense of an artefact over which the author has total control
and which reinforces the traditional model of intentionality and an
author-centred approach to interpretation. It also implies notions of the
author as an individual genius.
Reader:
Readers have often been thought of as the least significant element in
the author-text-reader axis.
An author-centred criticism, assumes that the author is both the origin
and object of literature and interpretation.
The rise of the readers importance in literary and critical theories has
shifted the emphasis of criticism and interpretation away from authorand text- centred approaches and has allowed for both, a more plural
set or responses to texts and also for more attention to the complex
processes of reading and interpretation.