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Literary Criticism

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Title: Literary Criticism


1
Literary Criticism
  • Class 4

2
The Aspern Papers (1)
  • Published in 1888, The Aspern Papers is a
    novelette by Henry James that originates from the
    later stages of his first great period of
    writing. It concerns an American editor who is
    greatly enamoured with the works of the early
    nineteenth century Romantic poet Jeffery Aspern.
    We follow him to Venice where he seeks the love
    letters that Aspern wrote to his mistress, Miss
    Bordereau (or Juliana as he had called her). The
    editor takes on a pseudonym to protect his
    identity from her, and finds her living in
    poverty alienated from the world with her niece.
    He is accepted as their lodger since Bordereau
    wishes to protect the future of Miss Tina (the
    niece). http//www.bibliomania.com/0/0/28/59/frame
    set.html

3
The Aspern Papers (2)
  • In time he explains his peculiar mission to Miss
    Tina. As Bordereau begins to deteriorate due to a
    serious illness he leaps at the opportunity and
    rifles through her desk only to be surprised by
    the lady herself before she suffers a relapse.
    What follows is a sad case of the blackmail of a
    heart as the old lady dies and Miss Tinas love
    for him becomes clear and she says she could only
    give the letters to a relative? In the end much
    falls prey of the doomed unrequited love but
    maturity and restraint hold sway in the end.
  • http//www.bibliomania.com/0/0/28/59/frameset.html

4
The Aspern Papers (3)
  • A more elaborate summary
  • http//mb.sparknotes.com/mb.epl?b53m991523h
    aspern,papers

5
Structuralist Reading (1)
  • Binary oppositions Consider how characters
    represent opposed values or qualities. The
    narrator and Juliana hold different conceptions
    of art, for example.

6
Structuralist Reading (2)
  • Propps morphology Could the tale be seen as a
    version of the fairy tale Propp describes?

7
Structuralist Reading (3)
  • Semiotics Observe how signs work in the story.
    For example, the narrator is characters with
    signs of detective fiction, tourism, romance, and
    of military conquest.

8
Structuralist Reading (4)
  • Semiotics misunderstanding caused by using
    different codes in communication.
  • Tina vs. the narrator
  • Juliana vs. the narrator

9
Structuralist Reading (5)
  • Semiotics the Aspern papers as a sign.
  • The irretrievability of the past
  • America when it was young
  • Venice before crowds of tourists came
  • What they signify for Juliana and the narrator
    respectively
  • Ryan, Michael. Literary Theory A Practical
    Introduction. Oxford Blackwell, 1999. 33.

10
  • Narratology

11
Narratology
  • A branch of structuralism
  • Definition
  • the study of narrative structures (Barry 322)

12
Basic Distinction
Story Fabula Histoire Plot/Discourse Sjuzhet recit
The what of a narrative The how of a narrative
Chronology Causality
The king died, and then the queen died. The king died, and then the queen died of grief.
13
Three main characters
  • Aristotle
  • Vladimir Propp
  • Gérard Genette

14
Aristotle
  • The hamartia tragic flaw
  • The anagnorisis recognition (of the flaw)
  • The peripeteia a reversal of fortune
    (consequence of the flaw)

15
Food for thought
  • Could we find the three elements in The Aspern
    Papers? ??????

16
Vladimir Propp
  • 1895-1970
  • The Morphology of the Folktale (1928)
  • Morphology
  • the study of forms

17
Vladimir Propp
  • Propps work is often considered to mark the
    birth of modern narratology and the structural
    analysis of narrative (Prince 37).

18
Propp Functions
  • Definition the fundamental components of the
    underlying structure of any (Russian) fairy
    tale. (Prince 36)

19
Propp Functions
  • Claimed that all folktales he studied are
    constructed by selecting a few items from a
    repertoire of 31 functions (Barry 227).

20
Propp Functions
  • Asserted that the functions always occur in the
    order listed (Barry 228)

21
Propp Role
  • Propp isolated 7 dramatis personae, or basic
    functional roles, each corresponding to a certain
    sphere of action, or a typical set of functions.

22
Propp Roles
  • The villain
  • The donor (provider)
  • The helper
  • The princess (a sought-for person) and her father
  • The dispatcher
  • The hero (seeker or victim)
  • The false hero

23
Propp Roles
  • One character may play more than one of these
    roles in any given tale (e.g., villain may also
    be false hero, donor may also be dispatcher) or
    one role may employ several characters (multiple
    villains, for instance . . . (Scholes 65).

24
Food for thought
  • Identify the functions and roles in The Hunchback
    of Notre Dame, or The Aspern Papers.

25
A Derivative
  • Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces.
    Princeton, NJ Princeton UP, 1949.

26
Joseph Campbell
  • The standard path of the mythological adventure
    of the hero is a magnification of the formula
    represented in the rites of passage
    separationinitiationreturn which might be
    named the nuclear unit of the monomyth (Campbell
    30).

27
Joseph Campbell
  • A hero ventures forth from the world of common
    day into a region of supernatural wonder
    fabulous forces are there encountered and a
    decisive victory is won the hero comes back from
    this mysterious adventure with the power to
    bestow boons on his fellow man (Campbell 30).

28
Campbells Monomyth (1)
  • Departure
  • (or separation)
  • Initiation
  • Return

29
Campbells Monomyth (1)
  • I. Departure (or separation)
  • 1. The Call to Adventure (or the signs of the
    vocation of the hero)
  • 2. Refusal of the Call (or the folly of the
    flight from the god)
  • 3. Supernatural Aid
  • 4. The Crossing of the First Threshold
  • 5. The Belly of the Whale (or the passage into
    the realm of night)

30
Campbells Monomyth (2)
  • II. Initiation
  • 1. The Road of Trials (or the dangerous aspect of
    the gods)
  • 2. The Meeting with the Goddess (or the bliss of
    infancy regained)
  • 3. Woman as the Temptress (or the realization and
    agony of Oedipus)
  • 4. Atonement with the Father
  • 5. Apotheosis (deification)
  • 6. The Ultimate Boon

31
Campbells Monomyth (3)
  • III. Return (or reintegration with society)
  • 1. Refusal of the Return (or the world denied)
  • 2. The Magic Flight (or the escape of Prometheus)
  • 3. Rescue from Without
  • 4. The Crossing of the Return Threshold (or the
    return to the world of common day
  • 5. Master of the Two Worlds
  • 6. Freedom to Live (or the nature and function of
    the ultimate boon)

32
Food for thought
  • Does Campbells monomyth exist in ????? or The
    Aspern Papers?

33
Potential problems Character
  • Phelan, James. Reading People, Reading Plots.
    Chicago U of Chicago P, 1989.
  • Argument characters can be multichromatic . . .
    it is a literary element composed of three
    components (3).

34
Components of Character
  • (1) Synthetic Characters are language
    constructs.
  • (2) Mimetic Characters as individuals.
    Characters are images of possible people.
  • (3) Thematic Characters as representative
    entities. A character is often taken as a
    representative figure that stands for a class.

  • (Phelan 2-3)

35
Group activity
  • Discuss these components in??? (???????), Miss
    Tina or the narrator in The Aspern Papers.

36
Food for Thought
  • Which component is underscored in structuralism?
    Which is more likely to be neglected?

37
  • Gérard Genette

38
Gérard Genette
  • Narrative Discourse. 1972. Trans. Jane E. Lewin.
    Itaca, NY Cornell UP, 1980.
  • Narrative Discourse Revisited. 1983. Trans. Jane
    E. Lewin. Itaca, NY Cornell UP, 1988.
  • ??? III?, ????????, ????, 2003

39
Genette
  • 1. Is the basic narrative mode mimetic or
    diegetic?
  • 2. How is the narrative focalized?
  • 3. Who is telling the story?
  • 4. How is time handled in the story?
  • 5. How is the story packaged?
  • 6. How are speech and thought represented?
    (Barry 231-39)

40
Genette (1) Mode
Mimetic Diegetic
Showing Staging a scene Slow motion Telling Summarizing Fastforward
What is done and said is staged for the reader, creating the illusion that we are seeing and hearing things for ourselves. A rapid summary of a long sequence of events, but all taking place off-stage, as it were.
(Barry 231-32)
41
Genette (1) Mode
Mimetic Diegetic
???????,????????,?????????,???????,??????????????????????????,??????????????,??????,????????Ray-Ban???????????????????????? ??????,??????????????????????,??????????????? ????, ????????, ????????????????? ??????, ??, ????????????????????? ??????!??????? ???,??,????? ?????????????? (??? ????? ??? 76-77) ???????????,??????????????????,????,????,??????????????,???????,???,?????????????????,??????????????,?????????????????,????? ????,????. . . .????,??????,??????,??????????,????????????,??????????? (??? ????? ??? 93)
42
Genette (2) Focalization
(viewpoint or perspective)
External focalization The viewpoint is outside the character depicted. (observable to a witness of the event)
Internal focalization What the character think and feel. (inaccessible to a witness)
Zero focalization Omniscient narration The narrated is presented in . . . a nonlocatable, indeterminable perceptual or conceptual position (Prince 103)
43
Genette (2) Focalization
(viewpoint or perspective)
External focalization ????????????????????,??????????????????????,?????,??????????,??????????????!?????????!? ??????,??????,????????? ??????????????????????????????????,?????????,????????????????? (??? ??????? ???? 110)
Internal focalization ?????????????,????????????????????? (??? ??????? 173) ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????,?????????????????????????,????????????,?????????????(??? ??????? 175)
Zero focalization ????,???????????,?????????????????????????????????,????????????????????? ?(??? ??????? 185)
44
Genette (3) Voice
authorial persona (covert) (effaced) A mere telling medium which strives for neutrality and transparency. Ex. ????????Ceremony A mere telling medium which strives for neutrality and transparency. Ex. ????????Ceremony
character-narrator (overt) (intrusive) (dramatized) Hetero- diegetic The narrator is a character outside the story s/he narrates. Ex. Wuthering Heights, The Great Gatsby
character-narrator (overt) (intrusive) (dramatized) Homo- diegetic The narrator is a character in the story s/he tells. Ex. The Oval Portrait, The Aspern Papers, Heart of Darkness
45
Genette (4) Order
Analepsis Back-take Flashback ?????,??????????????,??????,??????,?????????,???????????????,??????????????????,?????????????????????????????,???,???????????????????,???????, ????????????, ?????????????????, ?????, ?????, ???????????, ????????? (??? ???? ??? 315)
Prolepsis Fore-take Anticipation ?????????????,????????????,???????????,?????????????????,??????????,????????,?????,???????????????? (?? ????? ????? 107)
46
Genette (5) Story Levels
Frame narratives Single-ended The frame is not returned to at the end of the embedded. (e.g. The Turn of the Screw)
Frame narratives Double-ended The frame is re-introduced at the end of the embedded. (e.g. Heart of Darkness)
Frame narratives Intrusive (an alienation device) The embedded is occasionally interrupted to revert to the frame. (e.g. Heart of Darkness)
Embedded narratives Or the meta-narrative, a narrative within the narrative. Its the main story. (e.g. individual tales of The Canterbury Tales.) Or the meta-narrative, a narrative within the narrative. Its the main story. (e.g. individual tales of The Canterbury Tales.)
47
Genette (6) Speech
Direct Speech Tagged ??????????????????????????????? (182)
Direct Speech Untagged ???????????? ?????? ?????????? ?????? (181)
Direct Speech Selectively tagged ???????????????,???????????????????,?????????????,????????(183)
Indirect Speech Tagged indirect speech ?????????????????????????,?????????? (183)
Indirect Speech Free indirect speech ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????,????????????? (177)
(??? ??????? )
48
Free Indirect Discourse
  • FID narrated monologue
  • pensée avec
  • FID is often taken to contain mixed within it
    markers of two voices (a narrators and a
    characters).

49
Free Indirect Discourse
  • Definition the technique for rendering a
    characters thought in his own idiom while
    maintaining the third-person reference and the
    basic tense of narration (Cohn 100).

50
Free Indirect Discourse
  • FID is often marked by such contextual features
    (1) general markers of colloquialism (such as
    ejaculations, lexical fillers) (2) more specific
    markers of a group or class to which a character
    belongs (3) a characters personal idiom (4)
    markers of social-role relationships (Prince
    35-36).

51
Example 1
  • Direct discourse
  • Tom said, Gosh, I am tired.
  • (2) Indirect discourse
  • Tom said that he was tired.
  • (3) Free indirect discourse
  • Gosh, he was tired.

  • (Fludernik 74)

52
Example 2
  • She Lily started up and looked forth on the
    passing streets. Gerty!they were nearing Gertys
    corner. If only she could reach there before this
    laboring anguish burst from her breast to her
    lipsif only she could feel the hold of Gertys
    arms while she shook in the ague-fit of fear that
    was coming upon her!
  • (The House of Mirth I, xiii Wharton 1962 173)
  • (quoted in Fludernik 78)

53
Example 3
  • The trader was not shocked nor amazed . . . .
    He had seen Death many times . . . and so he only
    swore that the gal was a baggage, and that he was
    devilish unlucky, and that, if things went on in
    this way, he should not make a cent on the trip.
  • (Uncle Toms
    Cabin, xii Stowe 1981 130)
  • (quoted in
    Fludernik 116)

54
Recommended References on Free Indirect Discourse
  • http//osf1.gmu.edu/dkaufman/narrative.htm
  • http//www.ualberta.ca/dmiall/ShortStory/Mansfiel
    d-Woolf.htm
  • http//www.literaryencyclopedia.com/php/stopics.ph
    p?rectrueUID444

55
Joined-Up Narratology
Aristotle Theme
Propp Plot
Genette Narration
Barthes Readers de-coding
56
References
  • Cohn, Dorrit. Transparent Minds. Princeton, NJ
    Princeton UP, 1978.
  • Fludernik, Monika. The Fictions of Language and
    the Languages of Fiction. London Routledge,
    1993.
  • Prince, Gerald. Dictionary of Narratology.
    Lincoln U of Nebraska P, 1987.
  • Scholes, Robert. Structuralism in Literature.
    New Haven Yale UP, 1974.

57
  • The End
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