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Literary Textual Analysis

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Literary/Textual Analysis The Writing Center

Brigham Young University

The guidelines for writing about literature can help any student who is undertaking an analysis of a
cultural text. These texts include, but are not limited to, movies, musical pieces, speeches,
graffiti, paintings, newspapers, sculpture, installations, architecture, fashion, commodities,
advertisements, journals, letters, and even your own life. A textual analysis is open to creative
approaches where any text is made up of, or points to, another text, allowing one to create
meaning from a reading rather than merely discovering an inherent or intended meaning.
Obviously, the most commonly analyzed text is a work of literature, but it is important to know
that the principles discussed in this handout can be applied to the variety of texts already
mentioned.
Note: For a more in depth study on the nature of texts, see Roland Barthes’ From Work to Text.

The Purpose or Goal of a Textual Analysis


To begin the process of a textual analysis, it is important to understand the aim of such a project,
which is primarily to reveal something about the text in question that is not superficially or
explicitly evident in a casual reading of it. W.H. Auden has suggested that this process of
analysis can do six things:
1. Introduce authors or works of which others were hitherto unaware of.
2. Convince others that they have undervalued an author or a work because they had not read them carefully enough.
3. Show the relations between works of different ages and cultures which others have never seen because they do
not know enough and never shall.
4. Give a “reading” of a work which increases an understanding of it.
5. Throw light upon the process of artistic “Making.”
6. Throw light upon the relation of art to life, science, economics, ethics, religion, etc.
The Dyers Hand (New York, 1963), pp. 8-9
In addition to Auden’s list, there exist other questions of a broader nature that a productive textual
analysis can answer:
Why is this text important?
Why should it be read?
How should one approach/read a text?
How is the reading different in other contexts or with other texts?
How does language function in the text?
What is a text’s relationship with society, history, gender, sexuality, and race?
How are contemporary values and cultural assumptions reflected in the reading of a text?
What values (aesthetic, social, moral, philosophical, etc.) are used to form a literary canon, and how are these
reflected/challenged in the text?
How is this text influenced or explained by looking at other kinds of texts?
How does the text reorganize our paradigms for looking at the world?
An example of how a writer could answer one or more of these questions is seen in the following
abstract from the Publications of the Modern Language Association.
Feisel G. Mohamed, Confronting Religious Violence: Milton’s Samson Agonistes. Milton’s Samson has long
been a character about whom readers are irreconcilably divided. Current anxiety over terrorism has made it all the
more inviting to see Milton’s dramatic poem as a criticism of Samson’s slaughter of the Philistines, a sentiment
emphatically expressed in John Carey’s recent claim that “September 11 has changed Samson Agonistes, because it
has changed the renderings we can derive from it while still celebrating it as an achievement of the human
imagination.” This paper interrogates the association of Milton with present-day antipathy to religious violence and
seeks to sophisticate the position of critics who now find terrorism an inescapable presence in the field of literary
interpretation. The brand of reading most necessary in current discussion is one that avoids the reactionary
temptation to cleanse literary texts of sympathy with religious violence and to view such violence as the province
solely of the Other.

PMLA March 2005 (Volume 120 Number 2)


Notice how Mohamed is responding to the ways in which another person has read the text,
demonstrating that the most common and controversial question one can answer is how one
should read a text. However, this is not the only question answered by Mohamed’s approach to
Agonistes. Much of his analysis focuses on the text’s relationship with the cultural values and
assumptions of the world (specifically the western world) after September 11 and how these
inform and are transformed by the text in question. Tangentially, Mohammed is also answering
questions about canon formation in the post 9/11 world, arguing that just because a text seems to
be advocating religious violence, it does not mean that it should be excluded from the literary
canon.

Theory
One of the common mistakes students make when writing a textual analysis is to simply apply one of
the many “isms” of contemporary theory to a text, putting on the hat of a Marxist or a Feminist
and producing a flat reading which does more to reinforce and restate the given social theory than
to produce an effective analysis of the text at hand. It is important to understand that the specific
approaches, or “isms,” of contemporary theory are defined by the way that they go about
answering the more fundamental questions about texts previously mentioned. In each school of
thought there exists different viewpoints and fundamentally different ideas. Knowing this will
prevent undergraduate students from oversimplifiying what are very complex and diverse ways
of thinking. Thus, instead of merely using or applying theory as a tool to mass-produce
predictable readings of a text, begin an analysis by asking the fundamental questions listed,
letting theoretical assumptions and methodologies inform and transform your questions while the
literature forms and transforms the very theories used to explore the text with.
An example of an analysis that is informed by theory is an article about Shakespeare’s play Titus
Andronicus. Deborah Willis’s thesis statement demonstrates how one can begin with the
assumptions and foci of theories, then let the text transform or inform those theories.
Reading Titus Andronicus’s construction of honor and revenge in dialogue with trauma theory can, I believe,
help us move beyond the blind spots in some recent feminist criticisms of this play. Calling attention to Lavinia’s
plight need not require a deadening of response to the pain of Titus and other male characters; nor does a
recognition of the play’s embeddedness in patriarchal structures require a disavowal of women’s complicity in
revenge’s excess. Rather, the play invites us to see how characters of both sexes turn to revenge in the aftermath of
trauma to find relief from terrible pain….What is done to contain trauma reproduces trauma for others. Ironically,
“wholeness” is achieved only through acts of foreclosure and self-mutilation: in Titus Andronicus the perverse
therapy of revenge eventually consumes the self it tries to save.

Shakespeare Quarterly 2002 (Volume 53 Number 1)


It is important to see the relationship that Willis establishes between theory and the text. The
important phrase that she uses shows that they are read “in dialogue” with one another. In this
case feminist theory and trauma theory are read together, yet Willis readily recognizes the blind
spots of feminist theories about the play as well as the ways in which Titus departs from
traditional trauma theories. Willis effectively demonstrates why Titus itself is important to read
in correlation with theory and shows why it is important to answer the So What? question when
discussing literature.
The "So What?" Question
As you examine literary elements in the text, ask yourself So What? This question helps the paper
progress from merely identifying literary elements, themes, ideas, etc., in the text to making
assertions about those elements—forming a thesis. Using Willis thesis as a model, you can see
how her ideas could have developed using the So What? question.

Step One
A common way to begin analyzing a text is to examine the thematic elements of the text. Ask
yourself what the story is about, in general, or what the message of the text is—if it has one.
Identifying a central theme, sub theme, or even multiple themes is often up to you, but you will
be required to make an argument for your observation. In forming the initial topic of Titus
Andronicus, Willis begins by focusing on the theme of revenge breeding more revenge. Her
chosen theme seems to be that revenge is cyclical. Asking So What? at this point will help you
analyze the ways in which the theme is explored.
Topic: Titus Andronicus demonstrates that revenge is a cyclical process in which violence produces
more violence.
So What if Titus Andronicus demonstrates that to revenge a violent crime, people will often turn
to violence themselves?

Step Two
In order to answer the first So What?, it is often important to ask yourself how the theme is
communicated or what is special or significantly different in the text’s portrayal of this theme.
Certain theories and social questions will often be brought up in this stage. You may wish to ask
how genre is constructed, how gender relationships function, how class structures operate: Are
there power struggles between ideologies, race, religions, classes, etc.? This choice could involve
one of many elements of the language used, such as dialogue, setting, symbols, motifs,
metaphors, and—in this case—the very nature of the plot and characters. Your choice may also
be influenced by the interpretations of these elements by other writers. In this example, Willis’s
initial observation is based on her reaction to other feminist theories of the play. Then, after the
main area of focus has been identified, asking So What? will begin to focus your paper.
Revised Topic: Titus Andronicus demonstrates that members of both sexes take part in brutal acts of
violent revenge.
So What if Titus Andronicus demonstrates that members of both sexes take part in brutal acts of
violent revenge?

Step Three
Answering this So What? will lead you to acknowledge that your idea will engage a number of other
ideas. This is an effective time to use your observation as a springboard to discuss others’ ideas
and problems. Then, when the relationships of your ideas and theories are established, the final
So What? will help give the paper a direction and an overall point. In this case, Willis has
compared her observations about the women of the play with other observations about women in
the play. She also acknowledges that her idea could inform trauma theory.
Revised Topic: Titus Andronicus demonstrates how members of both sexes take part in acts of brutal
revenge, yet traditional feminist readings often cite the women in the play as victims in a
patriarchal world of violence. Also, because both sexes turn to revenge, the play invites us to see
how revenge and violence function in the aftermath of trauma.
So What if the play invites us to see how revenge and violence function in the aftermath of
trauma?

Step Four
In this final step, your thesis should begin to take its final shape. You should search for opportunities
to expand or show an exception to a certain theoretical model. This helps you explore how the
literature is exploring the fundamental question of what it is it to be human. In answering So
What?, Willis evaluates the way in which trauma theory meets her own ideas. Traditionally,
trauma theory looks at the way people deal with trauma. Their attempts to contain trauma often
involve many practices and expressions of therapy; however, in Titus the therapy of revenge is
one that (re)produces trauma in others. Reread her full thesis above to see how she answers the
final So What?

Final Steps
This initial thesis is not the end of the road, however. As the paper is organized and researched more,
the thesis may transform. Researching and writing a textual analysis will be much easier if you
keep these steps in mind before and during the reading of the text at hand. Hopefully, this
handout has also demonstrated that the more well-read you are, the more your possibilities are
opened for a textual analysis. Obviously, Willis’s thesis is quite complex, but it is important to
always read and engage ideas other than just the primary text.

Works cited.
The Dyers Hand (New York, 1963), pp. 8-9
PMLA March 2005 (Volume 120 Number 2)
Shakespeare Quarterly 2002 (Volume 53 Number 1)

Biblography.
From Work to Text.

Ryan Stodtmeister, summer 2005

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