English 10 Reviewer
English 10 Reviewer
English 10 Reviewer
-systematic analysis of a piece of literature that discusses its validity and evaluates its
worth.
In analyzing the content and context within which the book (or article) was written, the
writer of a critique argues whether it is worth reading or not.
1. Introduction - states the title of the work, the author's name and the date of publication.
-outlines main ideas of the book and identify the author's thesis.
-states your own thesis statement and your main idea about the work.
2. Body - briefly outlines the main ideas of the book, article, or film.
-you may also choose to discuss the structure, style or point of view.
3. Analysis - critically states what you like and do not like about the book, article or film.
-explains your ideas with specific examples from the book, article or film.
-summarizes your main ideas, if possible, with new and stronger words.
3. Intertextuality - texts are unavoidably influenced by other texts, in terms of their formal
and conceptual structures.
Formalism - critical approaches that analyze, interpret, or evaluate the inherent features of
a text.
-include not only grammar and syntax but also literary devices such as meter and tropes.
-what gives a literary work status as art, or as a great work of art, is how all of its elements
work together to create the reader's total experience.
Literature - form of knowledge with intrinsic elements - style, structure, imagery, tone,
genre.
Analysis - may follow from questions like, how do various elements work together to
shape the effect on the reader?
Style and theme influence each other and can't be separated if meaning is to be retained,
it's the interdependence in form and content that makes a text "literary".
"Extracting" elements in isolation (theme, character, plot, setting, etc.) may destroy a
reader's aesthetic experience of the whole.
-short stories usually has one plot so it can be read in one sitting. There are five essential
parts of a plot:
b. Rising Action - events in the story become complicated; the conflict is revealed.
-readers wonder what will happen next; will the conflict be resolved or not?
d. Falling Action - resolution begins; events and complication start to fall into place.
a. Place - geographical location; where is the action of the story taking place?
b. Time - historical period, time of day, year, etc.; when is the story taking place?
e. Mood or Atmosphere - what feeling is created at the beginning of the story? Cheerful or
eerie?
3. Character - there are two meanings for "character": 1) a person in a fictional story; or
2) qualities of a person.
b. What they say, thinks, feels, dreams, and what they do or does not do
c. What others say about them and how others react to them
a. First Person - story is told by the protagonist or a character who interacts closely with
the protagonist or other characters.
b. Second Person - story told by a narrator who addresses the reader or some other
assumed "you".
c. Third Person - story told by a narrator who sees all of the action.
-speaker uses the pronouns "he", "she", "it", "they", "his", "hers", "its", and "theirs".
5. Theme - central message, "moral of the story", and the underlying meaning of a fictional
piece.
-a careful reader or viewer who keeps in mind issues of power and money.
-similar to historical analysis, claims that literature is not art, independent of its time and
culture.
What is that society like? Is it like yours? Do the rich and powerful have all the control? And
what event inspired the author to create this society in the first place? These are all sorts of
questions asked in Marxist Criticism.
-examines how people are made into commodities to make money off of.
Why do this?
1. To show money
Marxist Approach - as the name suggests, Karl Marx in collaboration with Friedrich Engels
was the inspiration for the ideology behind this literary criticism.
b. Does the story address any societal issues, such as race, gender, and class?
e. How do social forces shape the power relationships between groups or classes of
people in the story? Who has the power, and who doesn't? Why?
f. What does the work say about economic or social power? Who has it and who doesn't?
h. Does the story address issues of economic exploitation? What role does money play?
i. How do economic conditions determine the direction of the characters' lives?
l. How does the microcosm (small world) of the story reflect that macrocosm (large
world) of the society in which it was composed?
Karl Marx - primarily an ideologist who believed that the main reason behind conflicts in
history was the attempts by the lower class to obtain power, and the effort by the upper
class to retain what they already had.
-German philosopher who wrote The Communist Manifesto. In it, Marx and co-author
Friedrich Engels argue that all of history is about the struggle between the haves and have-
nots. They predicted that one day, the proletariat, will throw off the oppression of the
bourgeoisie or those with means and power.
Marxist Perspective - to analyze all forms of art, literature, music, visual arts, etc.
-the focus is to analyze how the competition between different classes inspired or
influenced a given work.
-study of the struggle between the upper, lower, and middle class. The basis of this
perspective is economics.
Advantages
a. Useful for such works which does present an obvious moral philosophy.
c. Does not view literature merely as "art" isolated from all moral complications.
d. Recognizes that literature can affect readers, and that the message of a work is
important.
Disadvantages
b. Some believe that literature should be judged primarily on its artistic merits, not its
moral or philosophical content.
Questions/Points to Consider
e. What view of life does the story present? Which character best articulates this
viewpoint?
g. What moral statement, if any, does this story make? Is it explicit or implicit?
h. What is the author's attitude toward his world? Toward fate? Toward free will? Toward
God/god/s?