Lit 2 PDF
Lit 2 PDF
Lit 2 PDF
PAZ LATORENA
PAZ LATORENA (1908 - 1953)
¡ She was one of the accomplished female writers in English during the pre-war era.
She spent her first three years of college at the University of the Philippines but
transferred her senior year to the University of Santo Tomas (UST) where she
completed an education degree in 1930. She continued her graduate studies
thereafter, and was subsequently invited to teach at UST.
¡ She became a popular short story writer whose works steadily gained recognition
over the years. In 2000, UST published her only collection of short fiction, Desire and
Other Stories.
BALTAZAR GRACIÁN (1601-1658)
¡ English essayist, poet, and dramatist, who, with Richard Steele, was
a leading contributor to and guiding spirit of the periodicals The
Tatler and The Spectator.
¡ Defined Literary Taste “the discernment and appreciation of that
which is fundamentally excellent in literature”; “a faculty which
discerns the beauties of literature with pleasure and its
imperfections with dislike”.
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE (1772 –1834)
¡ To have literary taste…is to have a feeling and an inclination for what is fine and
beautiful in literature, to savor and to appreciate it, and to dislike and reject what is
vulgar and tawdry in it.
ACCORDING TO THE AUTHOR
¡ There comes a time in the life of every man when he discovers for himself or is led
to discover the wide and varied world of literature…in which the interplay of human
passions, the greatness and the misery of man, his heroism and his wickedness, his
strength and his weakness, are portrayed with relentless analysis by those whose
minds have probed human life to its deepest and most hidden springs of action.
When he finds himself in that world, and eventually he will, man will stand in need of
good literary taste.
ACCORDING TO THE AUTHOR
¡ For unless he knows how to discriminate, how to separate truth from falsehood,
good from bad, the specious from the true, the meretricious from the sincere; unless
he knows how not to take the truth of the portrayal for the truth of the thing
portrayed, unless he is convinced that aptness of expression and brilliance of diction
do not turn falsehood into truth, his sense of literary values runs the risk of being
falsified.
ACCORDING TO SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS (1723-1792)
Intellectual
• something in a literary composition which makes the reader
think to some purpose so that his mental life is enriched and
enlarged as a result.
Emotional
• An appeal to the emotions is the distinguishing mark of any
literature. A literary work has failed if it does not express or
arouse emotion.
Ethical
• when language goes beyond the normal express of
abnormality, and so gives the reader unhealthy information
and stimulates the morbid imagination, then it is immoral.
ACCORDING TO THE AUTHOR
¡ Education must erect barriers against rampant vulgarity. And good taste
is not only a barrier but a means of devulgarization; a taste that is
attuned to the fine and beautiful, a taste out of sympathy with the false
and the ignoble, a taste that would be one of the instruments for richer
living.
THE INTELLECTUAL/ACADEMIC TRADITION OR THE
CANONICAL TEXTS
INFERNO BY DANTE ALIGHIERI & THE BHAGAVADGITA
ORAL TRADITION
¡ It is a long narrative poem recounting heroic deeds, although the term has also been
loosely used to describe novels and motion pictures. In literary usage, the term
encompasses both oral and written compositions.
MEDIEVAL PERIOD
¡ After the fall of Rome in 410, various groups of people competed for
power and territory in the former northwestern provinces of the
Roman Empire.
¡ Cultural leadership moved north from the Mediterranean to France,
Germany, and the British Isles.
MEDIEVAL PERIOD
1. Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita A 1. One night, when half my life behind me lay,
2. mi ritrovai per una selva oscura, B 2. I wandered from the straight lost path afar.
3. ché la diritta via era smarrita. A 3. Through the great dark was no releasing way;
4. Ahi quanto a dir qual era è cosa dura B 4. Above that dark was no relieving star.
5. esta selva selvaggia e aspra e forte C 5. If yet that terrored night I think or say,
6. che nel pensier rinova la paura! B 6. As death's cold hands its fears resuming are.
7. Tant' è amara che poco è più morte; C 7. Gladly the dreads I felt, too dire to tell,
8. ma per trattar del ben ch'i' vi trovai, D 8. The hopeless, pathless, lightless hours forgot,
9. dirò de l'altre cose ch'i' v'ho scorte. C 9. I turn my tale to that which next befell
CANTO 1
¡ The Seventh Circle of Hell is divided into three rings. The Outer Ring houses
murderers and others who were violent to other people and property. In the
SEVENTH CIRCLE:
Middle Ring, the poet sees suicides who have been turned into trees and bushes
THEwhich
VIOLENT
are fed upon by harpies. In the Inner Ring are blasphemers and sodomites,
residing in a desert of burning sand and burning rain falling from the sky.
EIGHT CIRCLE: THE FRAUDULENT
¡ The Eight Circle of Hell is resided by the fraudulent. This circle of Hell is
divided into 10 Bolgias or stony ditches with bridges between them.
¡ Bolgia 1, Dante sees panderers and seducer.
¡ Bolgia 2 he finds flatterers.
¡ Bolgia 3, he and Virgil see those who are guilty of simony.
¡ Bolgia 4, they find sorcerers and false prophets.
¡ Bolgia 5 are housed corrupt politicians
¡ Bolgia 6 are hypocrites and
¡ In the remaining 4 ditches, Dante finds hypocrites (Bolgia 7), thieves
(Bolgia 7), evil counselors and advisers (Bolgia 8), divisive individuals
(Bolgia 9) and various falsifiers such as alchemists, perjurers, and
counterfeits (Bolgia 10).
NINTH CIRCLE: THE TREACHEROUS
¡ The last Ninth Circle of Hell is divided into 4 Rounds according to the seriousness of the sin. Though all residents
are frozen in an icy lake. Those who committed more severe sin are deeper within the ice.
¡ Round 1 – Caïna: this round is named after Cain, who killed his own brother in the first act of murder.
¡ Round 2 – Antenora: the second round is named after Antenor, a Trojan soldier who betrayed his city to the
Greeks.
¡ Round 3 – Ptolomaea: the third region of Cocytus is named after Ptolemy, who invited his father-in-law Simon
Maccabaeus and his sons to a banquet and then killed them.
¡ Round 4 – Judecca: the fourth division of Cocytus, named for Judas Iscariot.
ALLEGORY