Semi-Final Module in Contemporary, Popular and Emergent Lit
Semi-Final Module in Contemporary, Popular and Emergent Lit
Semi-Final Module in Contemporary, Popular and Emergent Lit
POPULAR
LITERATURE
Introduction
Popular literature contains writings that are intended for the masses and those
that find favour with large audiences. In this chapter, the students must acquaint
themselves with the nature, appeal and social functions of popular literature. It will also
talk about the characteristics and the different issues and challenges of popular
literature.
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LESSON 5: Introduction to Popular Literature
Objectives:
At the end of the lesson, the students should be able to:
a. Acquaint themselves with the nature, appeal, and social functions of popular literature.
I. NATURE
WHAT IS THE NATURE OF LITERATURE?
Literature can be defined as an expression of human feelings, thoughts, and ideas whose
medium is language, oral and written.
It is not only about human ideas, thoughts, and feelings but also about experiences of
the authors.
It can be medium for human to communicate what they feel, think, experience to the
readers.
‘LITERATURE’ BASED ON DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEWS
Literature is art,
Literature is language,
Literature is aesthetic,
Literature is fictional,
Literature is expressive, and
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Literature is affective.
Literature is everything in print.
It means any writing can be categorized as literature.
II. APPEAL
Something that makes the viewers or readers attracted and interested in the literary
piece.
MORAL FUNCTION
Literature may impart moral values to its readers. The morals contained in a 70
literary text, whether good or bad are absorbed by whoever reads it, thus helps in shaping their
personality.
LINGUISTIC FUNCTION
Literature preserves the language of every civilization from where it originated.
They are also evidences that a certain civilization has existed by recording the language and
preserving it through wide spans of time.
CULTURAL FUNCTION
Literature orients us to the traditions, folklore and the arts of our ethnic group’s
heritage. It preserves entire cultures and creates an imprint of the people’s way of living for
others to read, hear and learn.
EDUCATIONAL FUNCTION
Literature teaches us of many things about the human experience. It is used to
portray the facets of life that we see, and those that we would never dream of seeing. Literature
therefore, is a conduct for the chance to experience and feel things where we can learn things
about life.
HISTORICAL FUNCTION
Ancient texts, illuminated scripts, stone tablets etc. keeps a record of events that
happened in the place where they originated. Thus, they serve as time capsules of letters that are
studies by scholars and researchers of today.
IMPORTANCE OF LITERATURE
It entertains you and provides useful occupation in your free time.
It makes you a wiser and more experienced person by forcing you to judge, sympathize
with, or criticize the characters you read about.
Literature improves your command of language.
It teaches you about the life, cultures and experiences of people in other parts of the
world.
It gives you information about other parts of the world which you may never be able to
visit in your lifetime.
It helps you compare your own experiences with the experiences of other people.
It gives information which may be useful in other subjects, for example, in Geography,
Science, History, Social Studies and so on.
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CULTURAL CRITICISM focuses on the elements of culture and how they affect one’s
perceptions and understanding of texts.
FOUR ASSUMPTIONS:
Ethnicity, religious beliefs, social class, etc. are crucial components in formulating
plausible interpretation of text.
While the emphasis is on diversity of approach and subject matter, Cultural Criticism is
not the only means of understanding ourselves and our art.
An examination or exploration of the relationship between dominant cultures and the
dominated is essential.
When looking at a text through the perspective of marginalized peoples, new
understandings emerge.
FEMINIST CRITICISM is a product of the feminist movement of the 1960’s and 1970’s. It is
the representation of women in literature as an expression of the social norms about women and
their social roles and as a means of socialization. It focused on the images of the women in
books by male writers to expose the patriarchal ideology and how women characters are
portrayed.
PSYCHOANALYTIC CRITICISM based on Sigmund Freud ID, ego and superego, the
author’s own childhood effects the book and character. It is a type of criticism that uses theories
of psychology to analyze literature. It focuses on the author’s state of mind or the state of the
mind of fictional character. Psychoanalytic criticism uses two different approaches;
psychoanalysis of the author and psychoanalysis of the character.
MARXIST CRITICISM applies political science and economics to the study of literature.
Grew out of writings of Karl Marx, who was highly critical of the capitalist system of
economics and politics. It concerned with the issues of class conflict and materialism, wealth,
work, and the various ideologies that surrounds these things. It connotes higher class do control
arts, literatures, and ideologies.
Marxism As Compared To Feminist and New Historicism
Like feminist critics, it investigates how literature can work as a force for social change
or as a reaffirmation of existing conditions.
Like New Historicism, it examines how history influences literature; the difference is 74
that Marxism focuses on the lower class.
READER-RESPONSE CRITICISM (RR) critic believes that a reader’s interaction with the
text give its meaning. The text cannot exist without the reader. It focuses on the reader or
audience and the experience of a literary work rather than the author or the context and form of
work. If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear, does it make a noise? If a text sits
on the shelf in a bookstore and no one is around to read it, does the text have meaning?
ROLE OF THE READER RESPONSE CRITICISM
The role of the reader is pivotal in the understanding of literature – they can use a
psychoanalytical, structural, feminist, etc. approach to formulate their criticism (anything goes).
Readers are active in the reading process. They cannot read literature passively but must
react and therefore bring meaning to the text.
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EXERCISES!
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ACTIVITY 5.1: READ! READ! READ!
The summary of…
“FRANKENSTEIN”
By: Mary Shelley
ACTIVITY 5.2
Direction: Read the summary of the novel entitled “FRANKENSTEIN” and determine its
nature, appeal and the social function.
“Frankenstein”
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_________________________________________________ NATURE
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APPEAL _________________________________________________
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SOCIAL
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FUNCTIO
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LESSON 6: Popular Literature Genres
Objectives: 80
I. ROMANCE
WHAT IS A ROMANCE?
In the strictest academic terms, a romance is a narrative genre in literature that involves
a mysterious, adventurous, or spiritual story line where the focus is on a quest that involves
bravery and strong values, not always a love interest. However, modern definitions of romance
also include stories that have a relationship issue as the main focus.
EXAMPLES OF ROMANCE
In the academic sense, an example of a romance is a story in which the main character is
a hero who must conquer various challenges as part of a quest. Each challenge could be its own
story and can be taken out of the overall story without harming the plot.
Example 1
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A knight who wishes to prove himself by recovering a stolen heirloom from an enemy
may find himself attempting to make his way through a dangerous wood filled with thieves.
Once he has accomplished this challenge, he may find himself climbing a tall mountain
on which a group of people are in trouble. He would save the group somehow, and then move
on.
Then the final stage: the enemy’s kingdom. There may be a fair maiden whom he meets
and somehow helps or rescues, or perhaps she helps him.
But the fair maiden is not the focus of the story – his quest is the focus. Each story can be taken
out, yet each builds the hero’s strength to face his final quest. These stories tend to be serious
rather than humorous and touch on strong values.
Example 2
A modern romance would include:
The story of a character who keeps meeting the wrong type of people in his or her
relationships or has run into a problem with a current love relationship.
The story would focus on the struggles the character faces while finding Mr. or Mrs.
Right. The whole focus would be the relationship, although the character may also be dealing
with other struggles, such as losing a job, handling difficult parents, etc.
These stories may be funny, sad, tragic, serious, or a mix. The obvious resolution to the conflict
would be finding the right person or saving the present relationship.
TYPES OF ROMANCE
a. GOTHIC
In Gothic romance, the settings are usually in distant regions and the stories feature dark
and compelling characters. They became popular in the late 19th century and usually had a
sense of transcendence, supernatural, and irrationality. Popular Gothic novels still read by many
high school students today are classics such as:
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
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The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
b. HISTORICAL
Historical romance takes place in times long past and appears romantic due to the
adventure and wildness of the time. This also provides value and meaning to the lifestyle of the
characters. The following novels fit in this sub-genre:
The Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper
Rob Roy by Sir Walter Scott.
c. CONTEMPORARY/MODERN
Contemporary romance focuses on a love relationship and has a happy ending. There
are two ways these romance novels are written: as a series or category romance (the author
writes a succession of books that fit a theme or follow a storyline) or as a single-title romance.
Even more so, within the sub-genre romance, and as seen in many movies, there can be:
comedy-romance
tragic-romance
satire-romance
serious romance
Playwrights and poets also treat romance with various tones.
Science fiction, often called “sci-fi,” is a genre of fiction literature whose content is
imaginative, but based in science. It relies heavily on scientific facts, theories, and principles as
support for its settings, characters, themes, and plot-lines, which is what makes it different from
fantasy.
So, while the storylines and elements of science fiction stories are imaginary, they are usually
possible according to science—or at least plausible.
Although examples of science fiction can be found as far back as the Middle Ages, its
presence in literature was not particularly significant until the late 1800s. Its true popularity for
both writers and audiences came with the rise of technology over the past 150 years, with
developments such as electricity, space exploration, medical advances, industrial growth, and
so on. As science and technology progress, so does the genre of science fiction.
EXAMPLES OF SCIENCE FICTION
Read the following short passage:
As the young girl opened her window, she could see the moons Europa and Callipso
rising in the distance. A comet flashed by, followed by a trail of stardust, illuminating the dark,
endless space that surrounded the spacecraft; the only place she had ever known as home. As
she gazed at Jupiter, she dreamed of a life where she wasn’t stuck orbiting a planet, but living
on one. She envisioned stepping onto land, real land, like in the stories of Earth her father had
told her about. She tried to imagine the taste of fresh air, the feel of a cool, salty ocean, and the
sound of wind rustling through a tree’s green leaves. But these were only fantasies, not
memories. She had been born on the ship, and if they didn’t find a new inhabitable planet soon,
she would surely die there too.
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The example above has several prime characteristics that are common in science fiction.
First, it is set in the future, when humans no longer live on Earth. Second, it takes place on a
spacecraft that is orbiting Jupiter. Third, it features real scientific information—Europa and
Callipso are two of Jupiter’s moons, and as Jupiter is a planet made of gas, it would not be
possible for humans to live there, explaining why the ship is currently orbiting the planet rather
than landing on it.
TYPES OF SCIENCE FICTION
Science fiction is usually distinguished as either “hard” or “soft.”
1. Hard science fiction
Hard science fiction strictly follows scientific facts and principles. It is strongly focused
on natural sciences like physics, astronomy, chemistry, astrophysics, etc. Interestingly, hard
science fiction is often written by real scientists, and has been known for making both accurate
and inaccurate predictions of future events. For example, the recent film Gravity, the story of an
astronaut whose spacecraft is damaged while she repairs a satellite, was renowned for its
scientific accuracy in terms of what would actually happen in space.
2. Soft science fiction
Soft science fiction is characterized by a focus on social sciences, like anthropology,
sociology, psychology, and politics— in other words, sciences involving human behavior. So,
soft sci-fi stories mainly address the possible scientific consequences of human behavior. For
example, the Disney animated film Wall-E is an apocalyptic science fiction story about the end
of life on Earth as a result of man’s disregard for nature.
In truth, most works use a combination of both hard and soft science fiction. Soft sci-fi
allows audiences to connect on an emotional level, and hard sci-fi adds real scientific evidence
so that they can imagine the action actually happening. So, combining the two is a better
storytelling technique, because it lets audiences connect with the story on two levels. Science
fiction also has a seemingly endless number of subgenres, including but not limited to time
travel, apocalyptic, utopian/dystopian, alternate history, space opera, and military science
fiction.
Writing
Many students read fluently, but find it difficult to write. They complain that they don’t
know what to write. They have ideas, but they lack the written language skills to create a
beginning, follow a sequence of ideas and then draw their writing to a logical conclusion.
Students frequently ask if they may draw a picture when they’re writing. They are
reaching for images to support their language ideas. Allowed to use words and images they will
resolve problems of storytelling which they would not otherwise experience using words alone.
Like reading, comics provide a scaffolding so that students experience success in their writing.
Students transfer specific elements directly into text-only writing. For example, students learn
that whatever text found in a word balloon is put inside quotes in their text-only writing.
Using Comic Life students have a new publishing medium. Comic Life documents can 89
be printed, emailed to parents or posted as a website very easily.
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ACTIVITY 6.1
Direction: Use the Venn Diagram to differentiate popular from contemporary literature
genres.
POPULAR CONTEMPORARY
LITERATURE LITERATURE