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LITERATURE Introduction to Humanities

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Title: LITERATURE Introduction to Humanities


1
LITERATURE Introduction to Humanities
  • The Humanities Through the Arts
  • F. David Martin Lee A. Jacobus

2
Spoken language is the basic medium of literature.
  • Literature is an art whose medium is language
    used to affect the imagination.
  • Words themselves can evoke a response even when
    they are spoken independently of a grammatical
    setting, such as a sentence.
  • Fiction writers and poets share many of the
    techniques of literature because their effects
    depend on universal language art.

3
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4
Subject matter, Artistic Form, and Content
  • We can describe the subject matter and form,
  • But we can only point to the content,
  • For the content is being said.
  • There is no other way of saying it,
  • Because to change even one word changes the sound
    and changing the sound changes the meaning and in
    turn, the content.

5
Subject Matter and Artistic Form
  • The subject matter can be described a boys
    agony in face of his dying fathers
    submissiveness
  • Much can be said about the form the way, the
    sounds are organized and how they relate to the
    sense.

6
Literature as spoken language
  • Treating literature as spoken language points up
    its relationship to other serial arts such as
    music, dance, and film.
  • Literature happens in time.
  • In order to perceive it, we must be aware of what
    is happening now, remember what happed before and
    anticipate what is to come.

7
A Work of Literature
  • A work of literature is, in one sense, a
    construction of separable elements like
    architecture.
  • The details of a scene, a character or event, or
    a group of symbols can be conceived of as the
    bricks in the wall of literary structure.
  • If one of these details is imperfectly perceived,
    our understanding of the function of that detail
    and, in turn, of the total structure - will be
    incomplete.

8
The Literary Theme
  • The theme (main idea) of a literary work is
    usually a structural decision, comparable to an
    architectural decisions.
  • Decisions about the sound of the language, the
    characters, the events, the setting,
  • Are comparable to the decisions regarding the
    materials, size, shape, and landscape of
    architecture.

9
Literature as works of elements
  • It is helpful to think of literature as works
    composed of elements that can be discussed
    individually in order to gain a more thorough
    perception of them.
  • And it is equally important to realize that the
    discussion of these individual elements leads to
    a fuller understanding of the whole structure.

10
Literary TermsThe Narrative and the Narrator
  • The Narrative is a story told to an audience by a
    teller controlling the order of events and the
    emphasis those events receive.
  • Most Narratives concentrate upon the events. But
    some narratives have little action.
  • Sometimes the Narrator is a character in the
    fictionThe author controls the narrator and
    through the narrator leads the reader.
  • And reveals depth of character through responses
    to action.

11
Literary Terms
  • The symbol, simile, metaphor, images, and diction
    (word choices) are the main details of literary
    language that we will examine.
  • All these details are found in poetry, fiction,
    drama, and even the essay.

12
Literary Terms
  • Language has denotation a literal level where
    words mean what they obviously say,
  • And connotation a subtler level at which words
    mean more than they obviously say.

13
The Episodic Narrative
  • The term episodic describes one of the oldest
    kinds of literature,
  • Often used in epics, such as Homers Odyssey.
  • The overall structure of the story centering on
    the adventures of Odysseus, but each adventure is
    almost a complete entity in itself.

14
Narratives contd
  • We develop a sense of the character of Odysseus
    as we follow him in his adventures, but this does
    not always happen in episodic literature.
  • Often the adventures are not only completely
    disconnected from one another,
  • but the thread that is intended to connect
    everything the personality of the protagonist
    (main character) is not strong enough to keep
    things together.

15
The Organic Narrative
  • The term organic implies close connectedness in
    the parts of the structure.
  • The organic narrative connects every action and
    every character in subtle ways so that as the
    narrative unfolds,
  • the reader is given more and more information
    about all the events of the story.

16
THE QUEST NARRATIVE
  • The quest narrative is simple enough on the
    surface a hero sets out in search of a valuable
    treasure that must be found and rescued at all
    cost.
  • Such, in simple terms, is the plot of almost
    every adventure yarn and adventure film ever
    written.

17
Quest Narrative contd
  • Herman Melvilles Moby Dick, the story of Ahabs
    determination to find and kill the white whale
    that took his leg, is a quest narrative.
  • It achieves unity by focusing on the quest and
    its object.
  • The novel is centered on the question of good and
    evil. But as it progresses, the actions of the
    novel begin a reversal of values hallmark for
    quest narratives.

18
The Quest Narrative
  • The quest structure in Ralph Ellisons Invisible
    Man is so deeply rooted in the novel that the
    protagonist has no name.
  • We know a great deal about him because he
    narrates the story and tells us about himself.
  • He is Black, southern, and as a young college
    student, ambitious.

19
Quest Narrative Contd
  • His earliest heroes are George Washing Carver and
    Booker T. Washington.
  • He craves the dignity and the opportunity he
    associates with their lives.
  • But things go wrong. He is dismissed unjustly
    from his college in the south and must, like
    Odysseus, leave home to seek his fortune.

20
Quest Narrative contd
  • He imagines himself destined for better things
    and eagerly pursues his fate, finding a place to
    live and work up North, Beginning to find his
    identity as a black man.
  • He discovers the sophisticated urban society of
    New York City, the political subtleties of
    communism, the pains of black nationalism, and
    the realities of his relationship to white
    people, to whom he is an invisible man.

21
Quest Narrative contd
  • Yet he does not hate the whites, and in his own
    image of himself he remains as invisible man.
  • The novel ends with the protagonist in an
    underground place he has found and which he has
    lighted, by tapping the lines of the electric
    company, with almost 200 electric light bulbs.

22
Quest Narrative contd
  • Despite this colossal illumination, he still
    cannot think of himself as visible.
  • He ends his quest with out discovering who he is
    beyond this fundamental fact he is invisible.
  • Black or white, we can identify in many ways with
    this quest, for Ellison is showing us that
    invisibility is in all of us.

23
THE LYRIC
  • The lyric structure is virtually always a poem,
    primarily reveals a limited but deep feeling
    about something or event.
  • The lyric is often associated with the feelings
    of the poet, although we have already seen that
    it is not difficult for poets to create narrators
    distinct from themselves and to explore
    hypothetical feelings.

24
The Lyriccontd
  • If we participate we find ourselves caught up in
    the emotional situation of the lyric.
  • Poets can understand and interpret emotions
    without necessarily undergoing them.
  • The lyric has feeling emotion, passion, or mood
    as basic in its subject matter.

25
LITERARY DETAILS
  • Literature with reference to structure, the
    overall order within every structure are details
    that need close examination in order to properly
    perceive the structure.
  • Literature uses language to reveal meanings that
    are usually absent from daily speech.
  • Image, metaphor, symbol and diction are central
    to literature of all genres.

26
LITERARY DETAILSTHE IMAGE
  • An image in language asks us to imagine or
    picture what is referred to or being described.
  • Most images appeal to our sense of sight, but
    sound, taste, odor, and touch are often involved.
  • One of the most striking resources of language is
    its capacity to help us reconstruct in our
    imagination the reality of perceptions.

27
LITERARY DETAILSThe Metaphor
  • Metaphor helps writers intensify language.
  • Metaphor is a comparison designed to heighten our
    perception of the thing compared.
  • Poets or writers will usually let us know which
    of the things compared is the main object of
    their attention.

28
LITERARY DETAILS The Symbol
  • The symbol is a further use of metaphor.
  • Being a metaphor, it is a comparison between two
    things but unlike most perceptual and conceptual
    metaphors, only one of the things compared is
    clearly stated.
  • The symbol is clearly stated, but what it is
    compared with (sometimes a very broad range of
    meanings) is only hinted at.

29
LITERARY DETAILS Symbols contd
  • For instance, the white whale in Herman
    Melvilles novel, Moby Dick, is a symbol both in
    the novel and in the mind of Captain Ahab, who
    sees the whale as a symbol of all the malevolence
    and evil in a world committed to evil.
  • We may believer that the whale is simply a beast
    and not a symbol at all.

30
LITERARY DETAILSSymbols contd
  • Or, we may believe that the whale is a symbol for
    nature, which is constantly being threatened by
    human misunderstanding.
  • Such a symbol can mean more than one thing.
  • It is the peculiar quality of changing.
  • Symbols are usually vague and ambiguous.

31
LITERARY DETAILS Symbols contd
  • The most important thing to remember about the
    symbol is that it implies rather than explicitly
    states meaning.

32
LITERARY DETAILS DICTION
  • Diction refers to the choice of words.
  • Writing involves the choice of words, the term
    diction is usually reserved for literary acts
    (speech as well as the written word)
  • Words chosen especially for their impact.
  • To be, or not to be.
  • The diction of a work of literature will
    sometimes make that work seem inescapable, as if
    there were no other way of saying the same thing.

33
Diction contd
  • The careful use of diction can sometimes aid a
    satirist, whose intention is to say one thing and
    mean another.
  • So the careful use of structural diction can
    sometimes conceal a writers immediate intention,
    making it important for us to be explicitly aware
    of the diction until it has made its point.
  • -30-
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