Literary Criticism
Literary Criticism
Literary Criticism
CRITICISM
Purpose of literary criticism
1.To help us resolve a difficulty in the
reading.
2.To help us choose the better of two
conflicting readings.
3.To enable us to form judgments about
literature.
What is the
difference between
literary THEORY
from literary
CRITICISM?
Literary Theory Literary Criticism
Literature is an imitation
of life.
Classical Literary Theory
MIMESIS
- a literary work should imitate life.
(Plato)
FUNCTION - a literary work should either entertain
(Horace) (dulce) or teach (utile).
- a literary work to be sublime must have: grand
STYLE
thoughts, powerful emotions, figures of speech, nobility
(Longinus) of diction, and word arrangement.
CATHARSIS – a literary work should prompt emotional
(Aristotle) cleansing.
CENSORSHIP – a literary work that shows bad mimesis
(PLATO) should be censored.
Historical-
Biographical
Approach
Historical-Biographical
“sees a literary work chiefly, if not
exclusively, as a reflection of the author's
life and times or the life and times of the
characters in the work“
Historical-Biographical
“sees a literary work chiefly, if not
exclusively, as a reflection of the author's
life and times or the life and times of the
characters in the work“
Depicts the real condition of the various aspects of Filipino
society under the Spanish regime.
a. CRISOSTOMO IBARRA – Small group of Filipinos who had a
chance to study abroad and dreamt of improving the country
b. PADRE DAMASO – Wicked but ironically respected priests
c. CAPITAN TIAGO –officials and friars just to Rich Filipinos who
became allies of Spanishpreserve their wealth
d. SISA AND HER SONS – Filipino families who were oppressed by
the Spanish authorities
A Tale of Two Cities takes before
and during the French Revolution.
Jarvis Lorry is traveling to Paris to
reunite Dr. Manette with his long-
lost daughter Lucie. When Darnay
returns to Paris to save a former
servant, he is arrested by the
revolutionaries and sentenced to
death.
New Historicism
New Historicism
It is based on the idea that literature
should be studied and interpreted within
the context of both the history of the
author and the history of the critic.
New Historicism
It is based on the idea that literature
should be studied and interpreted within
the context of both the history of the
author and the history of the critic.
New Historicism
Historicism acknowledges not only that a work of
literature is influenced by its author's times and
circumstances, but that the critic's response to
that work is also influenced by his environment,
beliefs, and prejudices.
New Historicism
Historicism acknowledges not only that a work of
literature is influenced by its author's times and
circumstances, but that the critic's response to
that work is also influenced by his environment,
beliefs, and prejudices.
Twelfth Night
Stephen Greenblatt argues that the
homoerotic desire that’s all over
this play challenged Elizabethan
ideas about “heterosexual” norms.
The Elizabethans were a pretty
conservative bunch. It wasn’t
exactly okay for men to fall in love
with one another. So by reflecting
homoerotic desires, Shakespeare’s
play challenged those norms about
sexuality.
Moral-
Philosophical
Approach
Moral-Philosophical
Larger function is to teach
morality and to probe
philosophical issues.
Moral-Philosophical
Larger function is to teach
morality and to probe
philosophical issues.
Moral-Philosophical
Horace – “Literature should be
delightful and instructive.
Plato – “Literature must exhibit
moralism and utilitarianism.”
Moral-Philosophical
Horace – “Literature should be
delightful and instructive.
Plato – “Literature must exhibit
moralism and utilitarianism.”
The Lion Makers
(Panchatantara
Tales)
Moral:
“Scholarship is less than
sense.”
The book is the tale of a young teenaged boy, Huck,
and his companion, a black slave named Jim, on their
quest for freedom. Along the way, Huck is faced with
a number of tough decisions that force him to test his
ability to decipher between right and wrong, despite
the typical conventions of the society he lived in.
a)Red: blood,
sacrifice, violent
passion,
disorder
Archetypal Symbols
Green: growth,
sensation, hope, fertility,
in ironical context may
be associated with death
and decay
Archetypal Symbols
early 1990s-present
a. Resisting the perceived over simplified ideologies (and the white,
heterosexual, middle class focus) of second wave feminism; expands on
marginalized populations' experiences.
b. Writers like Alice Walker work to "...reconcile it [feminism] with the
concerns of the black community...[and] the survival and wholeness of
her people, men and women both, and for the promotion of dialog and
community as well as for the valorization of women and of all the
varieties of work women perform"