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Cultural Criticism

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Humans make sense of their world by the stories they tell about it ... Hierarchy is fundamental to human symbolism. Rhetoric promises transcendence. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cultural Criticism


1
Cultural Criticism
  • A Quick Introduction
  • COMM 142John A. Cagle

2
Assumptions of Narrative AnalysisWalter Fisher
  • Humans make sense of their world by the stories
    they tell about it
  • Beliefs and behaviors are based on good reasons
  • Narrative is a persuasive and vital form of
    interpretive discourse
  • Stories are symbolic actions that create social
    reality

3
Nature of Stories
  • Stories are linked to experience
  • Stories are linked to values
  • Narratives are based on experience, is a product
    of the memory, has a sense of chronology, is
    coherent, defines a central subject, and has
    closure.
  • Narratives advance persuasion by disarming
    listeners, awakening dormant experiences and
    feelings, and exposing some sort of propositional
    argument.

4
Characteristics of Narrative
  • Theme
  • Plot
  • Structure
  • Characters
  • Narrator
  • Setting
  • Time and Causality

5
Criticism of Narratives
  • Mythic
  • Narrative paradigm
  • Dramatistic
  • Fantasy theme analysis
  • Fictitious
  • Archetypal
  • ETC.

6
Narrative Critical Probes
  • Does the narrative spring from a Master Narrative
    (older narratives)?
  • What propositional content is the narrative
    designed to reveal?
  • What propositional content is the narrative
    designed to mask?
  • How effectively and how faithfully does the
    narrative deal with its subject matter?

7
Dramatism Kenneth Burke
  • The range of rhetoric is wide.
  • All life is drama.
  • Drama features human motives.
  • Hierarchy is fundamental to human symbolism.
  • Rhetoric promises transcendence.
  • Rhetoric is fueled by the negative.

8
Rhetorical Analysis of Narrative
  • Kenneth Burkes Pentad act, scene, agent,
    agency, and purpose
  • Pentadic ratios can be used to define the central
    relationship of any story scene-act,
    scene-agency, scene-purpose, act-purpose,
    act-agent, act-agency, agent-purpose,
    agent-agency, and agency-purpose.

9
Burkean Critical Probes
  • Can principles of hierarchy be found in
    discourse?
  • What is rhetors vocabulary of motives?
  • Who or what is being scapegoated?
  • Are strategies of transcendence in evidence?

10
Myth the Substance of Culture
  • Myths are master stories that describe
    exceptional people doing exceptional things and
    that serve as moral guides to proper action.

11
Types of Myth
  • Cosmological myths why we are here.
  • Societal myths the proper way to live.
  • Identity myths what makes one cultural grouping
    different from another.
  • Eschatological myths quo vadis?

12
Why use myth?
  • Heightened sense of authority
  • Sense of continuity
  • Sense of coherence
  • Sense of community
  • Sense of choice
  • Sense of agreement

13
Structuralism Claude Levi-Strauss
  • Critic should track the source of the myth
  • Effectiveness is tied to how mythic elements are
    combined
  • Task is to discover the unique harmony (of
    emotions, images, ideas, etc.) myth provides

14
Structuralism continued
  • Standard chronology vs. synchronic time
  • Narrative elements that share same context lead
    to myths basic argument
  • Dialectical forces in myth to discover its
    motivational base

15
Fantasy themes Ernest Bormann
  • Fantasy themes are mythic shorthand
  • Fantasy themes are local variations on mythic
    themes, prized tales of mankind in general
  • Purpose is to dramatize ideas for listeners
  • Listeners or readers lack the imagination needed
    to see what the world will be like if they accept
    new beliefs

16
Fantasy Themes Critical Probes
  • What are people like?
  • What are possibilities for group action?
  • On what people can you most depend?
  • What is mankinds purpose on earth?
  • What are measures of right and wrong?
  • How can success be measured?
  • What information is most valuable?
  • Why do things happen as they do?

17
Value Analysis in Criticism
  • All statements express a belief about specific
    persons, places, things, or situations.
  • A value statement expresses a judgment about what
    is the preferred end state or means of actions.
  • Stories are linked to experience and to values.
  • Humans make sense of the world by identifying
    values with it.
  • All statements can be interpreted for values.
  • Values and beliefs are linked together in
    cognitive systems.
  • Value systems define the individual and the
    culture.

18
Methods of Value Analysis
  • What words are used to articulate positive
    values?
  • What words are used to articulate negative
    values?
  • What values are implied in belief statements
    without specific value terms?
  • What values are implied by the formal elements
    used?

19
Major American Value Systems
  • Puritan-Pioneer activity, community,
    dedication, dignity, virtue vs. dereliction,
    disgrace, infidelity, laziness, waste
  • Enlightenment democracy, fact, freedom, liberty
    vs. book burning, dictatorship, error
  • Progressive change, efficiency, future, modern
    vs. backward, old-fashioned, impossible
  • Transcendental affection, brotherhood,
    friendship vs. anger, insensitive, mechanical
  • Personal Success career, dignity, family vs.
    coercion, disease, dullness, poverty
  • Collectivist brotherhood, cooperation,
    humanitarian aid vs. disorganization, inequality,
    greed

20
Defining a Culture
  • What is the emphasis of the value system?
  • What relationships exist among the values?
  • What is the relationship between implied and
    stated values?
  • What is the relationship between positive and
    negative values?
  • What values are not present in the text that
    might be expected?
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