Introduction To Modern Literary Theory L
Introduction To Modern Literary Theory L
Introduction To Modern Literary Theory L
* Disclaimer: When theories are explained briefly, a necessary reduction in their complexity
and richness occurs. The information below is meant merely as a guide or introduction to
modern literary theories and trends. Please note: Site is in the process of being updated and
expanded - January 2006.
• New Criticism
• Archetypal/Myth Criticism
• Psychoanalytic Criticism
• Marxism
• Postcolonialism
• Existentialism
• Phenomenology, and Hermeneutics
• Russian Formalism/Prague Linguistic
Circle/Linguistic Criticism/Dialogism
• Avant-Garde/Surrealism/Dadaism
• Structuralism and Semiotics
• Post-Structuralism and Deconstruction
• Postmodernism
• New Historicism
• Reception and Reader-Response Theory
• Feminism
• Genre Criticism
• Autobiographical Theory
• Travel Theory
• Links to Other General Literary Theory Websites
• General Resources - Bibliography of Critical
Theory Texts
New Criticism
A literary movement that started in the late 1920s and 1930s and originated in reaction to
traditional criticism that new critics saw as largely concerned with matters extraneous to the text,
e.g., with the biography or psychology of the author or the work's relationship to literary history.
New Criticism proposed that a work of literary art should be regarded as autonomous, and so
should not be judged by reference to considerations beyond itself. A poem consists less of a series
of referential and verifiable statements about the 'real' world beyond it, than of the presentation
and sophisticated organization of a set of complex experiences in a verbal form (Hawkes, pp. 150-
151). Major figures of New Criticism include I. A. Richards, T. S. Eliot, Cleanth Brooks, David
Daiches, William Empson, Murray Krieger, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, F. R. Leavis, Robert
Penn Warren, W. K. Wimsatt, R. P. Blackmur, Rene Wellek, Ausin Warren, and Ivor Winters.
Key Terms:
Intentional Fallacy - equating the meaning of a poem with the author's intentions.
Affective Fallacy - confusing the meaning of a text with how it makes the reader feel. A reader's
emotional response to a text generally does not produce a reliable interpretation.
Close reading (from Bressler - see General Resources below) - "a close and detailed analysis of
the text itself to arrive at an interpretation without referring to historical, authorial, or cultural
concerns" (263).
Further references:
• Brooks, Cleanth. The Well-Wrought Urn. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1947.
• Brooks, Cleanth and Robert Penn Warren, eds. Understanding Poetry. New York: Holt,
1938.
• Empson, William. Seven Types of Ambiguity. New York, 1955.
• Lentriccia, Frank. After the New Criticism. See chapter 6.
• Eagleton, Terry. Literary Theory: An Introduction. See chapter 1.
• Jefferson, Anne and David Robey. Modern Literary Theory: A
Comparative Introduction. See chapter 3.
• Ransom, John Crowe. The New Criticism. New York: New Directions, 1941.
• Richards, I. A. Practical Criticism. London: Routledge & Paul, 1964.
• Wimsatt, W. K., and Monroe C. Beardsley. The Verbal Icon. Lexington: U of Kentucky P,
1954.
• Winters, Ivor. In Defense of Reason. Denver: Swallow P, 1947.
• See also the works of Robert D. Denham, John Fekete, and William J. Kennedy.
Suggested Websites:
A form of criticism based largely on the works of C. G. Jung (YOONG) and Joseph Campbell
(and myth itself). Some of the school's major figures include Robert Graves, Francis Fergusson,
Philip Wheelwright, Leslie Fiedler, Northrop Frye, Maud Bodkin, and G. Wilson Knight. These
critics view the genres and individual plot patterns of literature, including highly sophisticated
and realistic works, as recurrences of certain archetypes and essential mythic formulae.
Archetypes, according to Jung, are "primordial images"; the "psychic residue" of repeated types of
experience in the lives of very ancient ancestors which are inherited in the "collective
unconscious" of the human race and are expressed in myths, religion, dreams, and private
fantasies, as well as in the works of literature (Abrams, p. 10, 112). Some common examples of
archetypes include water, sun, moon, colors, circles, the Great Mother, Wise Old Man, etc. In
terms of archetypal criticism, the color white might be associated with innocence or could signify
death or the supernatural.
Key Terms:
Anima - feminine aspect - the inner feminine part of the male personality or a man's image of a
woman.
Animus - male aspect - an inner masculine part of the female personality or a woman's image of
a man.
Archetype - (from Makaryk - see General Resources below) - "a typical or recurring image,
character, narrative design, theme, or other literary phenomenon that has been in literature from
the beginning and regularly reappears" (508). Note - Frye sees archetypes as recurring patterns
in literature; in contrast, Jung views archetypes as primal, ancient images/experience that we
have inherited.
Collective Unconscious - "a set of primal memories common to the human race, existing
below each person's conscious mind" (Jung)
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
Psychoanalytic Criticism
The application of specific psychological principles (particularly those of Sigmund Freud and
Jacques Lacan [zhawk lawk-KAWN]) to the study of literature. Psychoanalytic criticism may
focus on the writer's psyche, the study of the creative process, the study of psychological types and
principles present within works of literature, or the effects of literature upon its readers (Wellek
and Warren, p. 81). In addition to Freud and Lacan, major figures include Shoshona Felman,
Jane Gallop, Norman Holland, George Klein, Elizabeth Wright, Frederick Hoffman, and, Simon
Lesser.
Key Terms:
Unconscious - the irrational part of the psyche unavailable to a person's consciousness except
through dissociated acts or dreams.
• Id - completely unconscious part of the psyche that serves as a storehouse of our desires,
wishes, and fears. The id houses the libido, the source of psychosexual energy.
• Ego - mostly to partially (<--a point of debate) conscious part of the psyche that
processes experiences and operates as a referee or mediator between the id and superego.
• Superego - often thought of as one's "conscience"; the superego operates "like an
internal censor [encouraging] moral judgments in light of social pressures" (123, Bressler
- see General Resources below).
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
Marxism
A sociological approach to literature that viewed works of literature or art as the products of
historical forces that can be analyzed by looking at the material conditions in which they were
formed. In Marxist ideology, what we often classify as a world view (such as the Victorian age) is
actually the articulations of the dominant class. Marxism generally focuses on the clash between
the dominant and repressed classes in any given age and also may encourage art to imitate what is
often termed an "objective" reality. Contemporary Marxism is much broader in its focus, and
views art as simultaneously reflective and autonomous to the age in which it was produced. The
Frankfurt School is also associated with Marxism (Abrams, p. 178, Childers and Hentzi, pp. 175-
179). Major figures include Karl Marx, Terry Eagleton, Fredric Jameson, Raymond Williams,
Louis Althusser (ALT-whos-sair), Walter Benjamin (ben-yeh-MEEN), Antonio Gramsci
(GRAWM-shee), Georg Lukacs (lou-KOTCH), and Friedrich Engels, Theordor Adorno (a-DOR-
no), Edward Ahern, Gilles Deleuze (DAY-looz) and Felix Guattari (GUAT-eh-ree).
Key Terms (note: definitions below taken from Ann B. Dobie's text, Theory into Practice: An
Introduction to Literary Criticism - see General Resources below):
Commodificaion - "the attitude of valuing things not for their utility but for their power to
impress others or for their resale possibilities" (92).
Conspicuous consumption - "the obvious acquisition of things only for their sign value
and/or exchange value" (92).
Dialectical materialism - "the theory that history develops neither in a random fashion nor in
a linear one but instead as struggle between contradictions that ultimately find resolution in a
synthesis of the two sides. For example, class conflicts lead to new social systems" (92).
Reflectionism - associated with Vulgar Marxism - "a theory that the superstructure of a society
mirrors its economic base and, by extension, that a text reflects the society that produced it" (92).
Superstructure - "The social, political, and ideological systems and institutions--for example,
the values, art, and legal processes of a society--that are generated by the base" (92).
Further references:
• Cathouse, Louis. Lenin and Ideology. New York: Monthly Review P, 1971.
• Cary, Nelson, and Lawrence Gross berg, eds. Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture.
London: Macmillan, 1988.
• Bullock, Chris and David Peck. Guide to Marxist Criticism.
• Eagleton, Terry. Criticism and Ideology. New York: Schocken, 1978.
• Jay, Martin. Marxism and Totality. Berkeley: U of California P, 1935.
• Jameson, Fredric. Marxism and Form: Twentieth-Century Dialectical Theories of
Literature. Princeton: PUP, 1971.
• Jefferson, Anne and David Robey. Modern Literary Theory: A Comparative
Introduction. See chapter 6.
• Williams, Raymond. Marxism and Literature. Oxford: OUP, 1977.
• See also the works of Walter Benjamin, Tony Bennett, Terry Eagleton, John Frow, Georg
Lukacs, Pierre Macherey, Michael Ryan, and Ronald Taylor.
Suggested Websites:
Postcolonialism
Literally, postcolonialism refers to the period following the decline of colonialism, e.g., the end or
lessening of domination by European empires. Although the term postcolonialism generally
refers to the period after colonialism, the distinction is not always made. In its use as a critical
approach, postcolonialism refers to "a collection of theoretical and critical strategies used to
examine the culture (literature, politics, history, and so forth) of former colonies of the European
empires, and their relation to the rest of the world" (Makaryk 155 - see General Resources below).
Among the many challenges facing postcolonial writers are the attempt both to resurrect their
culture and to combat preconceptions about their culture. Edward Said, for example, uses the
word Orientalism to describe the discourse about the East constructed by the West. Major
figures include Edward Said (sah-EED), Homi Bhabha (bah-bah), Frantz Fanon (fah-NAWN),
Gayatri Spivak, Chinua Achebe (ah-CHAY-bay) , Wole Soyinka, Salman Rushdie, Jamaica
Kincaid, and Buchi Emecheta.
Key Terms:
Alterity - "lack of identification with some part of one's personality or one's community,
differentness, otherness"
Diaspora (dI-ASP-er-ah- "is used (without capitalization) to refer to any people or ethnic
population forced or induced to leave their traditional ethnic homelands, being dispersed
throughout other parts of the world, and the ensuing developments in their dispersal and culture"
(Wikipedia).
Hybridity - "an important concept in post-colonial theory, referring to the integration (or,
mingling) of cultural signs and practices from the colonizing and the colonized cultures
("integration" may be too orderly a word to represent the variety of stratagems, desperate or
cunning or good-willed, by which people adapt themselves to the necessities and the
opportunities of more or less oppressive or invasive cultural impositions, live into alien cultural
patterns through their own structures of understanding, thus producing something familiar but
new). The assimilation and adaptation of cultural practices, the cross-fertilization of cultures, can
be seen as positive, enriching, and dynamic, as well as as oppressive" (from Dr. John Lye - see
General Literary Theory Websites below).
Imperialism - "the policy of extending the control or authority over foreign entities as a means
of acquisition and/or maintenance of empires, either through direct territorial control or through
indirect methods of exerting control on the politics and/or economy of other countries. The term
is used by some to describe the policy of a country in maintaining colonies and dominance over
distant lands, regardless of whether the country calls itself an empire"
(Dictionary.LaborLawTalk.com).
Further references:
• Ashcroft, Bill, Griffiths, and Tiffin, Helen. The Empire Writes Back: Theory and Practice
in Post-Colonial Literatures
• Ashcroft, Bill. Gareth Griffiths, and Helen Tiffin, eds. The Post-Colonial Studies Reader.
• Guneratne, Anthony R. The Virtual Spaces of Postcoloniality: Rushdie, Ondaatje,
Naipaul, Bakhtin and the Others.
• Harding, Sandra and Uma Narayan, ed. Border Crossings: Multicultural and
Postcolonial Feminist Challenges to Philosophy 2. Indiana University Press, 1998.
• Fanon, Frantz, Black Skin. White Masks. Trans. by Charles Lam Markmann. London:
Pluto, 1986.
• Said, Edward. Orientalism.
• Soyinka, Wole. Myth, Literature, and the African World.
• Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics. London:
Routledge, 1988.
• Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty. The Post-Colonial Critic: Interviews, Strategies, Dialogues.
Ed. Sarah Harasym. London: Routledge, 1990.
• Trinh, T. Minh-Ha, Woman. Native, Other: Writing Postcoloniality and Feminism.
Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989.
• See writings of Jamaica Kincaid, Nadine Gordimer, Wole Soyinka, R. K. Narayan,
Yasunari Kawabata, Anita Desai, Frantz Fanon, Kazuo Ishiguro, Chinea Acheve, J.M.
Coetzee, Anthol Fugard, Kamala Das, Tsitsi Dangarembga, etc.
Suggested Websites:
Existentialism
Existentialism is a philosophy (promoted especially by Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus) that
views each person as an isolated being who is cast into an alien universe, and conceives the world
as possessing no inherent human truth, value, or meaning. A person's life, then, as it moves from
the nothingness from which it came toward the nothingness where it must end, defines an
existence which is both anguished and absurd (Guerin). In a world without sense, all choices are
possible, a situation which Sartre viewed as human beings central dilemma: "Man [woman] is
condemned to be free." In contrast to atheist existentialism, Søren Kierkegaard theorized that
belief in God (given that we are provided with no proof or assurance) required a conscious choice
or "leap of faith." The major figures include Søren Kierkegaard, Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin
Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre (sart or SAR-treh), Albert Camus (kah-MUE or ka-MOO) , Simone
de Beauvoir (bohv-WAHR) , Martin Buber, Karl Jaspers (YASS-pers), and Maurice Merleau-
Ponty (mer-LOH pawn-TEE).
Key Terms:
Absurd - a term used to describe existence--a world without inherent meaning or truth.
Authenticity - to make choices based on an individual code of ethics (commitment) rather than
because of societal pressures. A choice made just because "it's what people do" would be
considered inauthentic.
"Leap of faith" - although Kierkegaard acknowledged that religion was inherently unknowable
and filled with risks, faith required an act of commitment (the "leap of faith"); the commitment to
Christianity would also lessen the despair of an absurd world.
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
Phenomenology
Phenomenology is a philosophical method, first developed by Edmund Husserl (HUHSS-erel),
that proposed "phenomenological reduction" so that everything not "immanent" to consciousness
must be excluded; all realities must be treated as pure "phenomena" and this is the only absolute
data from which we can begin. Husserl viewed consciousness always as intentional and that the
act of consciousness, the thinking subject and the object it "intends," are inseparable. Art is not a
means of securing pleasure, but a revelation of being. The work is the phenomenon by which we
come to know the world (Eagleton, p. 54; Abrams, p. 133, Guerin, p. 263).
Hermeneutics
Hermeneutics sees interpretation as a circular process whereby valid interpretation can be
achieved by a sustained, mutually qualifying interplay between our progressive sense of the whole
and our retrospective understanding of its component parts. Two dominant theories that emerged
from Wilhelm Dilthey's original premise were that of E. D. Hirsch who, in accord with Dilthey, felt
a valid interpretation was possible by uncovering the work's authorial intent (though informed by
historical and cultural determinants), and in contrast, that of Martin Heidegger (HIGH-deg-er)
who argued that a reader must experience the "inner life" of a text in order to understand it at all.
The reader's "being-in-the-world" or dasein is fraught with difficulties since both the reader and
the text exist in a temporal and fluid state. For Heidegger or Hans Georg Gadamer (GAH-de-
mer), then, a valid interpretation may become irrecoverable and will always be relative.
Key Terms:
Dasein - simply, "being there," or "being-in-the world" - Heidegger argued that "what is
distinctive about human existence is its Dasein ('givenness'): our consciousness both projects the
things of the world and at the same time is subjected to the world by the very nature of existence
in the world" (Selden and Widdowson 52 - see General Resources below).
Intentionality - "is at the heart of knowing. We live in meaning, and we live 'towards,' oriented
to experience. Consequently there is an intentional structure in textuality and expression, in self-
knowledge and in knowledge of others. This intentionality is also a distance: consciousness is not
identical with its objects, but is intended consciousness" (quoted from Dr. John Lye's website -
see suggested resources below).
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
These linguistic movements began in the 1920s, were suppressed by the Soviets in the 1930s,
moved to Czechoslovakia and were continued by members of the Prague Linguistic Circle
(including Roman Jakobson (YAH-keb-sen), Jan Mukarovsky, and René Wellek). The Prague
Linguistic Circle viewed literature as a special class of language, and rested on the assumption
that there is a fundamental opposition between literary (or poetical) language and ordinary
language. Formalism views the primary function of ordinary language as communicating a
message, or information, by references to the world existing outside of language. In contrast, it
views literary language as self-focused: its function is not to make extrinsic references, but to
draw attention to its own "formal" features--that is, to interrelationships among the linguistic
signs themselves. Literature is held to be subject to critical analysis by the sciences of linguistics
but also by a type of linguistics different from that adapted to ordinary discourse, because its laws
produce the distinctive features of literariness (Abrams, pp. 165-166). An important contribution
made by Victor Schklovsky (of the Leningrad group) was to explain how language--through a
period of time--tends to become "smooth, unconscious or transparent." In contrast, the work of
literature is to defamiliarize language by a process of "making strange." Dialogism refers to a
theory, initiated by Mikhail Bakhtin (bahk-TEEN), arguing that in a dialogic work of literature--
such as in the writings of Dostoevsky--there is a "polyphonic interplay of various characters'
voices ... where no worldview is given superiority over others; neither is that voice which may be
identified with the author's necessarily the most engaging or persuasive of all those in the text"
(Childers & Hentzi, p. 81).
Key Terms:
Carnival - "For Bakhtin, carnival reflected the 'lived life' of medieval and early modern peoples.
In carnival, official authority and high culture were jostled 'from below' by elements of satire,
parody, irony, mimicry, bodily humor, and grotesque display. This jostling from below served to
keep society open, to liberate it from deadening..." (Bressler 276 - see General Resources below).
Heteroglossia - "refers, first, to the way in which every instance of language use - every
utterance - is embedded in a specific set of social circumstances, and second, to the way the
meaning of each particular utterance is shaped and influenced by the many-layered context in
which it occurs" (Sarah Willen, "Dialogism and Heteroglossia")
Monologism - "having one single voice, or representing one single ideological stance or
perspective, often used in opposition to the Bakhtinian dialogical. In a monological form, all the
characters' voices are subordinated to the voice of the author" (Malcolm Hayward).
Polyphony - "a term used by Mikhail Bakhtin to describe a dialogical text which, unlike a
monological text, does not depend on the centrality of a single authoritative voice. Such a text
incorporates a rich plurality and multiplicity of voices, styles, and points of view. It comprises, in
Bakhtin's phrase, "a plurality of independent and unmerged voices and consciousnesses, a
genuine polyphony of fully valid voices" (Henderson and Brown - Glossary of Literary Theory).
Further references:
• Bakhtin, Mikhail. The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays and Problems of Dostoevsky's
Poetics.
• Bennett, Tony. Formalism and Marxism. London, 1979.
• Ehrlich, Victor. Russian Formalism: History, Doctrine.
• Garvin, Paul L. (trans.) A Prague School Reader. Washington DC: Georgetown Academic
P, 1973.
• Holquist, Michael. Dialogism: Bakhtin and His World. London: Routledge, 1990.
• Jakobson, Roman. "Closing Statement: Linguistics and Poetics." Ed. Sebeok, Thomas.
Style in Language, pp. 350-377.
• Jefferson, Anne and David Robey. Modern Literary Theory: A Comparative
Introduction. See chapters 1 and 2.
• Lemon, Lee T. and Marion J. Reese. Russian Formalist Criticism: Four Essays.
• Lodge, David. After Bakhtin: Essays on Fiction and Criticism. London: Routledge, 1990.
• Medvedev, P.N. and Mikhail Bakhtin. The Formal Method in Literary Scholarship: A
Critical Introduction to Sociological Poetics.
• Mukarovsky, Jan. Aesthetic Function, Norm and Value as Social Facts. Trans. M. E.
Suino. Ann Arbor: Michigan State UP, 1979.
• Thompson, E.M. Russian Formalism and Anglo-American New Criticism.
• Wellek, René. The Literary Theory and Aesthetics of the Prague School.
Suggested Websites:
Avant-Garde/Surrealism/Dadaism
Avant-Garde literally meant the "most forwardly placed troops." The movement sought to
eliminate or at least blur the distinction between art and life often by introducing elements of
mass culture. These artists aimed to "make it new" and often represented themselves as alienated
from the established order. Avant-garde literature and art challenged societal norms to "shock"
the sensibilities of its audience (Childers & Hentzi, p.26 and Abrams, p.110).
Surrealism (also associated with the avant-garde and dadaism) was initiated in particular by
André Breton, whose 1924 "Manifesto of Surrealism" defined the movement's "adherence to the
imagination, dreams, the fantastic, and the irrational." Dada is a nonsense word and the
movement, in many ways similar to the trends of avant-garde and surrealism, "emphasized
absurdity, reflected a spirit of nihilism, and celebrated the function of chance" (Childers & Hentzi,
p. 69). Major figures include André Breton (breh-TAWN), Georges Bataille (beh-TYE), Tristan
Tzara, Jean Arp, Richard Huelsenbeck, Francis Picabia, Marcel Duchamp (dew-SHAHN), Man
Ray, Raoul Hausmann, Max Ernst and Kurt Schwitters.
Further references:
• Bataille, Georges. The Absence of Myth: Writings on Surrealism. Edited, translated, and
introduced by Michael Richardson. London, New York: Verso, c1994
• Bürger, Peter. Theory of the Avant-Garde.
• Butler, Christopher. After the Wake: An Essay on the Contemporary Avant-Garde.
• Calinescu, Matei. Faces of Modernity: Avant-Garde, Decadence, Kitsch.
• Carrouges, Michel. Andre Breton and the Basic Concepts of Surrealism. Trans. Maura
Prendergast. University of Alabama Press, 1974.
• Matthews, J. H. Toward the Poetics of Surrealism.
• Short, Robert. Dada and Surrealism.
Suggested Websites:
• Avant-Garde and Kitsch - Clement Greenberg (1939 article from Partisan Review)
• Surrealism - Wikipedia
• Dada - Wikipedia
• Surrealism - Dr. David Cunningham, The Literary Encyclopedia
Structuralism
Structuralism is a way of thinking about the world which is predominantly concerned with the
perceptions and description of structures. At its simplest, structuralism claims that the nature of
every element in any given situation has no significance by itself, and in fact is determined by all
the other elements involved in that situation. The full significance of any entity cannot be
perceived unless and until it is integrated into the structure of which it forms a part (Hawkes, p.
11). Structuralists believe that all human activity is constructed, not natural or "essential."
Consequently, it is the systems of organization that are important (what we do is always a matter
of selection within a given construct). By this formulation, "any activity, from the actions of a
narrative to not eating one's peas with a knife, takes place within a system of differences and has
meaning only in its relation to other possible activities within that system, not to some meaning
that emanates from nature or the divine" (Childers & Hentzi, p. 286.). Major figures include
Claude Lévi-Strauss (LAY-vee-strows), A. J. Greimas (GREE-mahs), Jonathan Culler, Roland
Barthes (bart), Ferdinand de Saussure (soh-SURR or soh-ZHOR), Roman Jakobson (YAH-keb-
sen), Vladimir Propp, and Terence Hawkes.
Semiology
Semiotics, simply put, is the science of signs. Semiology proposes that a great diversity of our
human action and productions--our bodily postures and gestures, the the social rituals we
perform, the clothes we wear, the meals we serve, the buildings we inhabit--all convey "shared"
meanings to members of a particular culture, and so can be analyzed as signs which function in
diverse kinds of signifying systems. Linguistics (the study of verbal signs and structures) is only
one branch of semiotics but supplies the basic methods and terms which are used in the study of
all other social sign systems (Abrams, p. 170). Major figures include Charles Peirce, Ferdinand de
Saussure, Michel Foucault (fou-KOH), Umberto Eco, Gérard Genette, and Roland Barthes (bart).
Key Terms (much of this is adapted from Charles Bressler's Literary Criticism: An Introduction
to Theory and Practice - see General Resources below):
Sign vs. Symbol - According to Saussure, "words are not symbols which correspond to
referents, but rather are 'signs' which are made up of two parts (like two sides of a sheet of paper):
a mark,either written or spoken, called a 'signifier,' and a concept (what is 'thought' when the
mark is made), called a 'signified'" (Selden and Widdowson 104 - see General Resources below).
The distinction is important because Saussure contended that the relationship between signifier
and signified is arbitrary; the only way we can distinguish meaning is by difference (one sign or
word differs from another).
The relational nature of language implied by Saussure's system rejects the concept that a
word/symbol corresponds to an outside object/referent. Instead, meaning--the interpretation of a
sign--can exist only in relationship with other signs. Selden and Widdowson use the sign system
of traffic lights as an example. The color red, in that system, signifies "stop," even though "there is
no natural bond between red and stop" (105). Meaning is derived entirely through difference, "a
system of opposites and contrasts," e.g., referring back to the traffic lights' example, red's
meaning depends on the fact that it is not green and not amber (105).
Further references:
On this question [the tendency of critics to read deconstruction "as a species of all-licensing
sophistical 'freeplay'"), as on so many others, the issue has been obscured by a failure to grasp
Derrida's point when he identifies those problematic factors in language (catachreses, slippages
between 'literal' and 'figural' sense, subliminal metaphors mistaken for determinate concepts)
whose effect--as in Husserl--is to complicate the passage from what the text manifestly means to
say to what it actually says when read with an eye to its latent or covert signifying structures. This
'free-play' has nothing whatsoever to do with that notion of an out-and-out hermeneutic license
which would finally come down to a series of slogans like "all reading is misreading," "all
interpretation is misinterpretation," etc. If Derrida's texts have been read that way--most often by
literary critics in quest of more adventurous hermeneutic models--this is just one sign of the
widespread deformation professionelle that has attended the advent of deconstruction as a new
arrival on the US academic scene. (151)
In addition to Jacques Derrida, key poststructuralist and deconstructive figures include Michel
Foucault (fou-KOH), Roland Barthes (bart), Jean Baudrillard (zhon boh-dree-YAHR), Helene
Cixous (seek-sou), Paul de Man (de-MAHN), J. Hillis Miller, Jacques Lacan (lawk-KAWN), and
Barbara Johnson.
Key Terms :
Aporia (ah-por-EE-ah)- a moment of undecidability; the inherent contradictions found in any
text. Derrida, for example, cites the inherent contradictions at work in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's
use of the words culture and nature by demonstrating that Rousseau's sense of the self's
innocence (in nature) is already corrupted by the concept of culture (and existence) and vice-
versa.
Différance - a combination of the meanings in the word différance. The concept means 1)
différer or to differ, 2) différance which means to delay or postpone (defer), and 3) the idea of
difference itself. To oversimplify, words are always at a distance from what they signify and, to
make matters worse, must be described by using other words.
Erasure (sous rature) - to highlight suspect ideologies, notions linked to the metaphysics of
presence, Derrida put them under "erasure," metaphorically pointing out the absence of any
definitive meaning. By using erasure, however, Derrida realized that a "trace" will always remain
but that these traces do not indicate the marks themselves but rather the absence of the marks
(which emphasize the absence of "univocal meaning, truth, or origin"). In contrast, when
Heidegger similarly "crossed out" words, he assumed that meaning would be (eventually)
recoverable.
Logocentrism - term associated with Derrida that "refers to the nature of western thought,
language and culture since Plato's era. The Greek signifier for "word," "speech," and "reason,"
logos possesses connotations in western culture for law and truth. Hence, logocentrism refers to a
culture that revolves around a central set of supposedly universal principles or beliefs" (Wolfreys
302 - see General Resources below).
Trace - from Lois Tyson (see General Resources below): "Meaning seems to reside in words (or
in things) only when we distinguish their difference from other words (or things). For example, if
we believed that all objects were the same color, we wouldn't need the word red (or blue or green)
at all. Red is red only because we believe it to be different from blue and green (and because we
believe color to be different from shape). So the word red carries with it the trace of all the
signifiers it is not (for it is in contrast to other signifiers that we define it)" (245). Tyson's
explanation helps explain what Derrida means when he states "the trace itself does not exist."
Transcendental Signifier - from Charles Bressler (see General Resources below): a term
introduced by Derrida who "asserts that from the time of Plato to the present, Western culture
has been founded on a classic, fundamental error: the searching for a transcendental signified, an
external point of reference on which one may build a concept or philosophy. Once found, this
transcendental signified would provide ultimate meaning. It would guarantee a 'center' of
meaning...." (287).
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
• Deconstruction - Wikipedia
• Deconstruction: Some Assumptions - Dr. John Lye, Brock University
• Deconstruction - Stanford University
• Deconstruction - Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory & Criticism
• Poststructuralism - Wikipedia
• Structuralism/Poststructuralism - Dr. Mary Klages, University of Colorado at Boulder
Postmodernism
Modernism Post-Modernism
Purpose Play
Design Chance
Hierarchy Anarchy
Hypotactic Paratactic
Totalization Deconstruction
Presence Absence
Root/Depth Rhizome/Surface
Synthesis Antithesis
Anarchy and
Urbanism
fragmentation
Elitism Anti-authoritarianism
In its simplest terms, postmodernism consists of the period following high modernism and
includes the many theories that date from that time, e.g., structuralism, semiotics, post-
structuralism, deconstruction, and so forth. For Jean Baudrillard, postmodernism marks a
culture composed "of disparate fragmentary experiences and images that constantly bombard the
individual in music, video, television, advertising and other forms of electronic media. The speed
and ease of reproduction of these images mean that they exist only as image, devoid of depth,
coherence, or originality" (Childers and Hentzi 235).
Further references:
Suggested Websites:
New Historicism (sometimes referred to as Cultural Poetics) emerged in the 1970s and 1980s,
largely in reaction to the lingering effects of New Criticism and its ahistorical approach. "New"
Historicism's adjectival emphasis highlights its opposition to the old historical-biographical
criticism prevalent before the advent of New Criticism. In the earlier historical-biographical
criticism, literature was seen as a (mimetic) reflection of the historical world in which it was
produced. Further, history was viewed as stable, linear, and recoverable--a narrative of fact. In
contrast, New Historicism views history skeptically (historical narrative is inherently subjective),
but also more broadly; history includes all of the cultural, social, political, anthropological
discourses at work in any given age, and these various "texts" are unranked - any text may yield
information valuable in understanding a particular milieu. Rather than forming a backdrop, the
many discourses at work at any given time affect both an author and his/her text; both are
inescapably part of a social construct. Stephen Greenblatt was an early important figure, and
Michel Foucault's (fou-KOH) intertextual methods focusing especially on issues such as power
and knowledge proved very influential. Other major figures include Clifford Geertz, Louis
Montrose, Catherine Gallagher, Jonathan Dollimore, and Jerome McCann.
Key Terms:
Discourse - [from Wolfreys - see General Resources below] - "defined by Michel Foucault as
language practice: that is, language as it is used by various constituencies (the law, medicine, the
church, for example) for purposes to do with power relationships between people"
Episteme - [from Wolfreys - see General Resources below] - "Michel Foucault employs the idea
of episteme to indicate a particular group of knowledges and discourses which operate in concert
as the dominant discourses in any given historical period. He also identifies epistemic breaks,
radical shifts in the varieties and deployments of knowledge for ideological purposes, which take
place from period to period"
Power - [from Wolfreys - see General Resources below] - "in the work of Michel Foucault, power
constitutes one of the three axes constitutive of subjectification, the other two being ethics and
truth. For Foucault, power implies knowledge, even while knowledge is, concomitantly,
constitutive of power: knowledge gives one power, but one has the power in given circumstances
to constitute bodies of knowledge, discourses and so on as valid or invalid, truthful or untruthful.
Power serves in making the world both knowable and controllable. Yet, in the nature of power, as
Foucault suggests in the first volume of his History of Sexuality, is essentially proscriptive,
concerned more with imposing limits on its subjects."
Self-positioning - [from Lois Tyson - see General Resources below] - "new historicism's claim
that historical analysis is unavoidably subjective is not an attempt to legitimize a self-indulgent,
'anything goes' attitude toward the writing of history. Rather, the inevitability of personal bias
makes it imperative that new historicists be aware of and as forthright as possible about their own
psychological and ideological positions relative to the material they analyze so that their readers
can have some idea of the human 'lens' through which they are viewing the historical issues at
hand."
Thick description - a term developed by Clifford Geertz; [from Charles Bressler - see General
Resources below]: a "term used to describe the seemingly insignificant details present in any
cultural practice. By focusing on these details, one can then reveal the inherent contradictory
forces at work within culture. "
Further References:
• Brannigan, John. New Historicism and Cultural Materialism. New York: St. Martin's P,
1998.
• Cox, Jeffrey N. and Larry J. Reynolds, eds. New Historical Literary Study: Essays on
Reproducing Texts, Representing History. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1993.
• Dollimore, Jonathan. Radical Tragedy: Religion, Ideology, and Power in the Drama of
Shakespeare and his Contemporaries. Chicago: U of Chicago, 1984.
• Foucault, Michel. The Foucault Reader. Ed. Paul Rabinow. New York: Pantheon, 1984.
• ---. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Trans. Alan Sheridan. New York:
Vintage, 1979.
• ---. The Order of Things. New York: Pantheon, 1972.
• Gallagher, Catherine and Stephen Greenblatt. Practicing New Historicism. Chicago: U of
Chicago P, 2000.
• Geertz, Clifford. The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays. New York: Basic Books,
1983.
• Greenblatt, Stephen. Hamlet in Purgatory. Princeton: PUP, 2001.
• ---. Introduction. "The Forms of Power and the Power of Forms in the Renaissance."
Genre 15 (Summer 1982): 3-6.
• ---. Learning to Curse: Essays in Early Modern Culture. New York: Routledge, 1991.
• ---. Renaissance Self-Fashioning: From More to Shakespeare. Chicago: U of Chicago P,
1980.
• Hunt, Lynn, ed. The New Cultural History. Berkeley and Los Angeles: U of California P,
1989.
• McCann, Jerome. The Beauty of Inflections: Literary Investigations in Historical
Method and Theory. OUP, 1985.
• Montrose, Louis. "New Historicisms." Redrawing the Boundaries: The Transformation
of English and American Literary Studies. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt and Giles Gunn. New
York: Modern Language Association, 1992.
• Morris, Wesley. Toward a New Historicism. Princeton: PUP, 1972.
• Vesser, H. Aram, ed. The New Historicism. New York: Routledge, 1989.
Suggested Websites:
Key Terms:
Horizons of expectations - a term developed by Hans Robert Jauss to explain how a reader's
"expectations" or frame of reference is based on the reader's past experience of literature and
what preconceived notions about literature the reader possesses (i.e., a reader's aesthetic
experience is bound by time and historical determinants). Jauss also contended that for a work to
be considered a classic it needed to exceed a reader's horizons of expectations.
Implied reader - a term developed by Wolfgang Iser; the implied reader [somewhat akin to an
"ideal reader"] is "a hypothetical reader of a text. The implied reader [according to Iser]
"embodies all those predispositions necessary for a literary work to exercise its effect --
predispositions laid down, not by an empirical outside reality, but by the text itself. Consequently,
the implied reader as a concept has his roots firmly planted in the structure of the text; he is a
construct and in no way to be identified with any real reader" (Greig E. Henderson and
Christopher Brown - Glossary of Literary Theory).
Further References:
Suggested Websites:
Feminism
To speak of "Feminism" as a theory is already a reduction. However, in terms of its theory (rather
than as its reality as a historical movement in effect for some centuries) feminism might be
categorized into three general groups:
Further, women (and men) needed to consider what it meant to be a woman, to consider how
much of what society has often deemed inherently female traits, are culturally and socially
constructed. Simone de Beauvoir's study, The Second Sex, though perhaps flawed by Beauvoir's
own body politics, nevertheless served as a groundbreaking book of feminism, that questioned the
"othering" of women by western philosophy. Early projects in feminist theory included
resurrecting women's literature that in many cases had never been considered seriously or had
been erased over time (e.g., Charlotte Perkins Gilman was quite prominent in the early 20th
century but was virtually unknown until her work was "re-discovered" later in the century). Since
the 1960s the writings of many women have been rediscovered, reconsidered, and collected in
large anthologies such as The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women.
However, merely unearthing women's literature did not ensure its prominence; in order to assess
women's writings the number of preconceptions inherent in a literary canon dominated by male
beliefs and male writers needed to be re-evaluated. Betty Friedan's The Feminist Mystique (1963),
Kate Millet's Sexual Politics (1970), Teresa de Lauretis's Alice Doesn't: Feminism, Semiotics,
Cinema (1984), Annette Kolodny's The Lay of the Land (1975), Judith Fetterly's The Resisting
Reader (1978), Elaine Showalter's A Literature of Their Own (1977), or Sandra Gilbert and Susan
Gubar's The Madwoman in the Attic (1979) are just a handful of the many critiques that
questioned cultural, sexual, intellectual, and/or psychological stereotypes about women.
Key Terms (this list is woefully inadequate; suggestions for additional terms would be
appreciated):
Androgyny - taken from Women Studies page of Drew University - "'...suggests a world in which
sex-roles are not rigidly defined, a state in which ‘the man in every woman' and the ‘woman in
every man' could be integrated and freely expressed' (Tuttle 19). Used more frequently in the
1970's, this term was used to describe a blurring, or combination of gender roles so that neither
masculinity or femininity is dominant."
Backlash - a term, which may have originated with Susan Faludi, referring to a movement ( ca.
1980s) away from or against feminism.
Écriture féminine - Écriture féminine, literally women's writing, is a philosophy that promotes
women's experiences and feelings to the point that it strengthens the work. Hélène Cixous first
uses this term in her essay, "The Laugh of the Medusa," in which she asserts, "Woman must write
her self: must write about women and bring women to writing, from which they have been driven
away as violently as from their bodies. Écriture féminine places experience before language, and
privileges the anti-linear, cyclical writing so often frowned upon by patriarchal society'
(Wikipedia).
Essentialism - taken from Women Studies page of Drew University - "The belief in a uniquely
feminine essence, existing above and beyond cultural conditioning...the mirror image of
biologism which for centuries justified the oppression of women by proclaiming the natural
superiority of men (Tuttle 90)." Tong's use of the term is relative to the explanation of the division
of radical feminism into radical-cultural and radical libertarian.
Gynocentrics - "a term coined by the feminist scholar-critic Elaine Showalter to define the
process of constructing "a female framework for analysis of women's literature [in order] to
develop new models [of interpretation] based on the study of female experience, rather than to
adapt to male models and theories'" (Bressler 269, see General Resources below).
Jouissance - a term most commonly associated with Helene Cixous (seek-sou), whose use of the
word may have derived from Jacques Lacan - "Cixous follows Lacan's psychoanalytic paradigm,
which argues that a child must separate from its mother's body (the Real) in order to enter into
the Symbolic. Because of this, Cixous says, the female body in general becomes unrepresentable
in language; it's what can't be spoken or written in the phallogocentric Symbolic order. Cixous
here makes a leap from the maternal body to the female body in general; she also leaps from that
female body to female sexuality, saying that female sexuality, female sexual pleasure, feminine
jouissance, is unrepresentable within the phallogocentric Symbolic order" (Dr. Mary Klages,
"Postructuralist Feminist Theory")
Semiotic - "[Julia] Kristeva (kris-TAYV-veh) makes a distinction between the semiotic and
symbolic modes of communication:
The semiotic level includes rhythms and sounds and the way they can convey powerful yet
indefinable emotions" (Colin Wright - University of Nottingham).
• Cixous (seek-sou), Hélène. "The Laugh of the Medusa" or "Sorties: Out & Out:
Attacks/Ways Out/Forays."
• Flax, Jane. Thinking Fragments: Psychoanalysis, Feminism and Postmodernism in the
Contemporary West, 1990.
• Gallop, Jane. The Daughter's Seduction: Feminism and Psychoanalysis, 1982.
• Grosz, E. A. (Elizabeth A.) Sexual Subversions: Three French Feminists. Boston : Allen &
Unwin, 1989.
• Irigaray, Luce. Speculum of the Other Woman. Ithaca, N.Y : Cornell University Press,
1985. HQ1154 .I7413 1985
• Kristeva (kris-TAYV-veh), Julia. The Kristeva Reader. Ed. Toril Moi, 1986.
• Marks, Elaine, and Isabelle de Courtivron, eds. New French Feminism. Brighton:
Harvester, 1980.
• Moi, Toril. Sexual/textual Politics: Feminist Literary Theory. London ; New York :
Methuen, 1985.PN98.W64 M65 1985
• Oliver, Kelly, ed. French Feminism Reader. Rowman & Littlefield. 2000
• Stanton, Domna. "Difference on Trial: A Critique of the Maternal Metaphor in Cixous,
Irigaray, and Kristeva." The Poetics of Gender. Ed. Nancy K. Miller, 1986.
• Brooks, Ann. Postfeminisms: Feminism, Cultural Theory, and Cultural Forms, 1997.
• Butler, Judith. Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of "Sex." 1993 .
• Crow, Barbara A., ed. Radical Feminism: An Historical Reader, 1999.
• Daly, Mary. Quintessence ... Realizing the Archaic Future: A Radical Elemental Feminist
Manifesto, 1999.
• Heller, Dana, ed. Cross-Purposes: Lesbian Studies, Feminist Studies, and the Limits of
Alliance, 1997.
• hooks, bell. Outlaw Culture: Resisting Representations, 1994.
• James, Joy. SHADOWBOXING: Representations of Black Feminist Politics, 1999 .
• Showalter, Elaine, ed. Speaking of Gender, 1989.
• Spector, Judith, ed. Gender Studies: New Directions in Feminist Criticism, 1986.
• Vicinus Martha, ed. Lesbian Subjects: A Feminist Studies Reader, 1996.
Suggested Websites:
Genre Criticism
Study of different forms or types of literature. Genre studies often focus on the characteristics,
structures, and conventions attributed to different forms of literature, e.g., the novel, short story,
poem, drama, film, etc. More recent inquiry in genre criticism centers on the bias often inherent
in genre criticism such as its latent (or overt) racism and sexism.
• Coe, Richard, Lorelei Lingard, and Tatiana Teslenko, eds. The Rhetoric and Ideology of
Genre: Strategies for Stability and Change. Cresskill: Hampton Press, 2002.
• Cohn, Dorit. Transparent Minds: Narrative Modes for Presenting Consciousness in
Fiction. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1978. (discussion of first and third person narratology)
PN 3448 P8 C6
• Derrida, Jacques. "'The Law of Genre." Derek Attridge, (ed.) Acts of Literature. (New
York and London: Routledge, 1992), 221 - 252.
• Duff, David, ed. Modern Genre Theory. Pearson Education Limited, 2000.
• Echer, Michael J.C. The Conditioned Imagination from Shakespeare to Conrad. New
York: Holmes and Meier, 1977 (argues that in approaching a work of literature that
involves an “exo-cultural” character or theme we must take into account the “culturally
conditioned imagination” on the creation of a work of art) PR 408 .S64 E25
• Fabb, Nigel. Language and Literary Structure: The Linguistic Analysis of Form in Verse
and Narrative. Cambridge: CUP, 2002.
• Fowler, Alistair. Kinds of Literature: An Introduction to the Theory of Genres and
Modes. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1982 - (on the nature of literary genres and how they are
formed) PN 45 .5 F6
• Hale, Dorothy. Social Formalism: The Novel in Theory from Henry James to the
Present. Stanford UP, 1998.
• Hutcheon, Linda. Narcissistic Narrative: The Metafictional Paradox. Waterloo: Wilfred
Lauren UP, 1980 (PN 3503 .H8)
• Heiserman, Arthur. The Novel Before the Novel: Essays and Discussions About the
Beginning of Prose Fiction in the West. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1977 ( traces beginnings
of prose fiction to about the fourth century, A.D. ) - PA 3040 .H38
• Keilman, Stephen B. The Self-Begetting Novel. New York: Columbia UP, 1980 - (a study
of the narrative method in specific texts) PN 3503 .K4
• McKeon, Michael, ed. Theory of the Novel: A Historical Approach. John Hopkins Press,
2000.
• Rimmon-Kenan, Shloinith. Narrative Fiction: Contemporary Poetics. London and New
York: Methuen, 1983 - excellent brief book providing overview on narratology (PN 212
.R55)
• Rosen, Alan. Dislocating the End: Climax, Closure, and the Invention of Genre. New
York: Peter Lang, 2001.
• Smith, Barbara Hernstein. On the Margins of Discourse: The Relation of Literature to
Language. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1979 - argues that novels are usually imitations of
nonfictive writing acts, such as the production of histories or biographies (PN 54 .SE)
• Spilka, Mark. Towards a Poetics of Fiction: Essays from Novel: A Forum on Fiction.
Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1977 - collection of essays on various modern views and
approaches to fictional critical theory (PN 3331 .T65)
• Suleiman, Susan R. Authoritarian Fictions: The Ideological Novel as a Literary Genre.
New York: Columbia UP, 1983 - constructs a viable model of the roman a these as a genre
(PQ 671 .S94)
• Torgovnick, Marianna. Closure in the Novel. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1981 — categorizes
endings or closure in novels into three types: circular, parallel and incomplete (PN 3378
.T6)
• Watson, George. The Story of the Novel. London: Macmillan, 1979 — discusses the
elements that make a novel memorable; treats three types of English novels: memoir
novel, letter— novel and the novel in the third person (PN 3491. .W3)
• Stowe, William W. Balzac, James, and the Realistic Novel. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1983
- uses three novels by James and three by Balzac to construct a basis of “systematic
realism” in the novel (PN 3499 .578)
• Baker, Carlos. The Echoing Green: Romanticism, Modernism and the Phenomenon of
Transference in Poetry. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1984 - elegantly written discussion of
Wordsworth, Coleridge Byron, Shelley and Keats and then Yeats, Frost, Pound, Eliot,
Stevens and Auden (PS 310 .R66 B34)
• Berg, Viola Jacobsen. Pathways for the Poet: Poetry Forms Explained and Illustrated.
Millford: Mott Media, 1977 - dictionary of poetic forms (PM 1042 .B47)
• Forrest-Thomson, Veronica. Poetic Edifice: A Theory of 20th Century Poetry.
Manchester UP, 1978 - argues that poetry “is resolutely artificial, even when it tries to
imitate the diction and cadences of ordinary speech”
• Fussell, Paul. Poetic Meter and Poetic Form. New York: Random House, 1979 (this is the
revised edition--a description, history and review of theory on poetic meter and form (PH
1505 .F79 — first edition 1965)
• Hill, Archibald. Constituent and Pattern in Poetry. Austin: University of Texas P. 1977 -
discussion of linguistic patterns in poetry (PN 1042 .H46)
• Haublein, Ernst. The Stanza. London: Methuen (Critical Idiom Series) — historical
description of stanzaic tradition (PM 1059 .S83)
• Hartman, Charles 0. Free Verse: An Essay on Prosody. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1980 —
essay on the prosody of free verse (PH 1531 .F73 H37) - surveys critical positions and
emphasizes re-definitions of the term (PN 56 .P3 P37x)
• McDonald, Peter. Serious Poetry: Form and Authority from Yeats to Hill. Oxford:
Clarendon P, 2002.
• Nemerov, Howard. Figures of Thought: Speculations on the Meaning of poetry and
other Essays. Boston: David R. Godine, - lively collection of essays. on poetry; what
poetry is, the language of poetry, etc. (PN 1031 .N44)
• Perkins, David. History of Modern Poetry: from the 1890’s to the High Modernist Mode.
Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1976 - discussion of poetic traditions from 1890 to 1930 (PR 610
.P4)
• Thompson, Denys. The Uses of Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1978 - aims at
describing part played by poetry from the earliest times to present day (PN 1111 .T5)
• Welsh, Andrew. Roots of Lyric: Primitive Poetry and Modern Poetics. Princeton:
Princeton UP, 1977 - traces modern lyrical poetry back to its origins in primitive and folk
rhythmical patterns (PN 1126 .W45
• Brockett, Oscar G. The Theatre: An Introduction. 4th ed. New York: Holt, Rinhart, and
Winston, 1979 - useful reference work (PN 2101 .B7)
• Caputi, Anthony. Buffo: The Genius of Vulgar Comedy. Detroit: Wayne State UP, 1978 -
on the history of low comedy and farce, from the Greeks to the present (PN 1922 .C3)
• Goldman, Michael. On Drama: Boundaries of Genre, Borders of Self. Ann Arbor: U of
Michigan P, 2000.
• Howarth. W. D., ed. Comic Drama: The European Heritage. London: Methuen, 1977 —
series of papers that trace the development of comic drama from its beginnings in ancient
Greece to the 20th Century (PN 2928 .E8 C6)
• Raber, Karen. Dramatic Difference: Gender, Class, and Genre in the Early Modern
Closet Drama. Newark: U of Delaware P, 2001.
• Salgado, Gamini. English Drama: A Critical Introduction. London: Edward Arnold, 1980
- an account of drama in England from its medieval beginnings to the early 1970s;
excellent (PR 625 .S2)
• Schleuter, June. Metafictional Characters in Modern Drama. New York: Columbia UP,
1979 discusses Pirandello, Genet, Beckett, Weiss, Albee, Stoppard, Handke (PN 1861 .S3)
• Seidel, Michael and Edward Mendelson. Homer to Beckett: The European Epic and
Dramatic Tradition. New Haven: Yale UP, 1977 - sixteen essays on the study of European
epic and dramatic traditions (PN 56 .E65 H6)
• Sinfield, Alan. Dramatic Monologue. London: Methuen, 1977
• Allen, Waiter. The Short Story in English. New York: Oxford UP.— mostly traces
“English” language short story (PR829 .A47)
• May, Charles E., ed. Short Story Theories. Athens: Ohio UP, 1976 - collection of essays by
short story writers and critics approaching short story as a genre form; good annotated
bibliography (PN 3373 .S39)
Suggested Websites:
Autobiographical Theory
Further References:
• a/b: Auto/Biography Studies (journal edited by Rebecca Hogan, Joseph Hogan, and
Emily Hipchen
• "Autobiography" - The Literary Encyclopedia
• Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography (book series) edited by William L. Andrews
Travel Theory
Interest in travel and travel writing has emerged as the result of an intellectual climate that is
interrogating imperialism, colonialism, postcolonialism, ethnography, diaspora, multiculturalism,
nationalism, identity, visual culture, and map theory. Travel theory's lexicon includes such words
as transculturation, metropolitan center, "imperial eyes," contact zones, border crossing,
tourist/traveler, imperial frontier, hybridity, margin, expatriation/repatriation,
cosmopolitanism/localism, museology, displacement, home/abroad, arrival/return, road
narrative, and diaspora, to name just a few. Major theorists include Sara Mills, James Clifford,
Anne McClintock, Mary Louise Pratt, Homi Bhabha (bah-bah), Edward Said, Paul Fussell, Steven
Clark, Inderpal Grewal, Guy Debord, Umberto Eco, Caren Kaplan, Dean McCannell, James Urry,
Jean Baudrillard (boh-dree-YAHR), and David Spurr.
References:
• Baudrillard, Jean. America. 1986. Trans Chris Turner. London & New York: Verso, 1996.
• Bhabha, Homi. The Location of Culture. New York: Routledge, 1994.
• ———. ed. Nation and Narration. London: Routledge, 1993.
• Blunt, Alison. Travel, Gender, and Imperialism: Mary Kingsley and West Africa. New
York: Guilford P, 1994,
• Buzard, James. The Beaten Track: European Tourism, and the Ways to Culture, 1800–
1918. Oxford: Clarendon, 1993.
• Chard, Chloe, and Helen Langdon. Transports: Travel, Pleasure, and Imaginative
Geography, 1600-1830. New Haven: Yale UP, 1996.
• Chambers, Erve. Native Tours: The Anthropology of Travel and Tourism. Waveland
Press, 1999.
• Clark, Steven H, ed. Travel Writing and Empire: Postcolonial Theory in Transit. Zed,
1999.
• Clifford, James. Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century.
Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1997.
• Codrescu, Andrei. Road Scholar: Coast to Coast Late in the Century. New York:
Hyperion, 1993.
• Conroy, Jane, ed. Cross-Cultural Travel: Papers from the Royal Irish Academy
Symposium on Literature and Travel--National University of Ireland, Galway,
November 2002 - Vol. 7, Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (pictured below - series
description)- New York: Peter Lang, 2003.
• Cooper, Brenda. The Weary Sons of Conrad: White Fiction Against the Grain of Africa's
Dark Heart. New York: Peter Lang, 2002. Vol. 3 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines.
(pictured below - series description)
• Debord, Guy. The Society of the Spectacle. Trans. Donald Nicholson-Smith. New York:
Zone Books, 1995.
• Desmond, Jane. Staging Tourism: Bodies on Display from Waikiki to Sea World.
Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2001.
• Duncan, James and Gregory, Derek. Writes of Passage: Reading Travel Writing.
London: Routledge, 1999.
• Eco, Umberto. Travels in Hyperreality. Trans. William Weaver. San
Diego: Harcourt, 1986.
• Fussell, Paul. Abroad: British Literary Travelling Between the Wars.
Oxford: Oxford UP, 1980.
• Gilbert, Helen, and Anna Johnston, eds. In Transit: Travel, Text,
Empire. Vol. 4 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines - (pictured below
- series description). New York: Peter Lang, 2002.
• Grewal, Inderpal. Home and Harem: Nation, Gender, Empire, and the
Cultures of Travel. Durham: Duke UP, 1996.
• Groom, Eileen. Methods for Teaching Travel Literature and Writing:
Exploring the World and Self. Vol. 9 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (pictured
below - series description). New York: Peter Lang, 2005.
• Holland, Patrick, and Graham Huggan. Graham. Tourists with Typewriters: Critical
Reflections on Contemporary Travel Writing. Ann Arbor: U of Michigan P, 1998.
• Hutchinson, Sikivu. Imagining Transit: Race, Gender, And Transportation Politics in
Los Angeles. Vol. 2 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (pictured below - series
description) - New York: Peter Lang, 2002.
• Knowable, Michael, ed. Temperamental Journeys: Essays on the Modern Literature of
Travel. Athens and London: U of Georgia P, 1992.
• Lackey, Kris. Road Frames: The American Highway Narrative. Lincoln and London: U
of Nebraska P, 1997.
• Lawrence, Karen. Penelope Voyages: Women and Travel in the British Literary
Tradition. Theca and London: Cornell UP, 1994.
• Luck, Beth Taylor Fisher, eds. American Writers and the Picturesque Tour. Taylor &
Francis, 1997.
• McConnell, Dean. The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class. Berkeley: U of
California P, 1999.
• Meccano, Anne. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest.
New York: Rout ledge, 1995.
• Mills, Sara. Discourses of Difference: An Analysis of Women’s Travel Writing and
Colonialism. London and New York: Rout ledge, 1991.
• Morgan, Susan. Place Matters.New Brunswick: Rutgers UP, 1996.
• Paes de Barros, Deborah. Fast Cars and Bad Girls: Nomadic Subjects and Women's
Road Stories. Vol. 8 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (pictured below - series
description) - New York: Peter Lang, 2004.
• Pratt, Mary Louise. Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation. London:
Routledge, 1992.
• Primeau, Ronald. Romance of the Road: The Literature of the American Highway.
Bowling Green: Bowling Green State UP, 1996.
• Rojek, Chris, and James Urry, eds. Touring Cultures: Transformations of Travel and
Theory. London: Routledge, 1997.
• Said, Edward. Culture and Imperialism. New York: Knopf, 1993.
• ———.Orientalism. New York: Vintage Books, 1979.
• Schmeller, Erik S. Perceptions of Race and Nation in English and American Travel
Writers, 1833-1914. Vol. 5 - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (pictured below - series
description) - New York: Peter Lang, 2004.
• Shaffer, Marguerite S. Seeing America First: Tourism and National Identity, 1880-1940.
Smithsonian Institution P, 2001.
• Siegel, Kristi, ed. Gender, Genre, and Identity in Women's Travel Writing. New York:
Peter Lang, 2004. (description)
• Siegel, Kristi, ed. Issues in Travel Writing: Empire, Spectacle, and Displacement. New
York: Peter Lang, 2002. (description)
• Smith, Sidonie. Moving Lives: Twentieth Century Women's Travel Narratives. U of
Minnesota P, 2001.
• Spurr, David. The Rhetoric of Empire: Colonial Discourse in Journalism, Travel
Writing, and Imperial Administration. Durham: Duke UP, 1993.
• Urry, James. The Tourist Gaze: Leisure and Travel in Contemporary Societies. London:
Sage Publications, 1990.
• Watson, Sophie, and Katherine Gibson, eds. Postmodern Cities and Spaces. Cambridge:
Blackwell, 1995.
• Wood, Denis. The Power of Maps. New York: Guilford Press, 1992.
Book Series - Travel Writing Across the Disciplines (series description) - Kristi Siegel,
General Editor
Methods for
The Travel Cross- In Transit: Teaching Imagining Fast Cars Perceptions
Weary Sons
Narratives of Ella Cultural Travel, Text, Travel Transit and Bad of Race and
of Conrad
Maillart (Steinert Travel Empire Literature (Hutchinson Girls (Paes Nation
(Cooper)
Borella) Volume (Conroy) (Gilbert) and Writing ) de Barros) (Schmeller)
Volume 3
12 Volume 7 Volume 4 (Groom) Volume 2 Volume 8 Volume 5
Volume 9
Suggested Websites:
(Note: many of these websites were suggested in Dr. Donald Ross's Snapshot Traveller)
• International Society for Travel Writing (ISTW) - Dr. Donald Ross, of the University of
Minnesota, also hosts a listserv and writes the Snapshot Traveller - website
• Studies in Travel Writing - edited by Tim Youngs (Nottingham Trent University)
• The Journal of African Travel Writing
• Literary Traveler (Nomad Group)
• Association for the Study of Travel in Egypt and the Near East (ASTENE)
• Centre de Recherché sur la Littérature des Voyages (CRLV)
• Bertens, Hans. Literary Theory: The Basics. London and New York: Routledge, 2001
• Bressler, Charles E. Literary Criticism: An Introduction to Theory and Practice. 3rd Ed.
Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2003.
• Bertens, Hans. Literary Theory: The Basics. London and New York: Routledge, 2001
• Culler, Jonathan. Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction, OUP, 2000.
• Davis, Robert Con, and Ronald Schleifer. Contemporary Literary Criticism: Literary
and Cultural Studies (4th Edition). Longman, 1988.
• Dobie, Ann B. Theory into Practice: An Introduction to Literary Criticism. Thomson,
2002.
• Eagleton, Terry. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1983.
• Green, Keith and Jill LeBihan. Critical Theory & Practice: A Coursebook. London and
New York: Routledge, 2004.
• Groden, Michael, and Martin Kreiswirth. The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory
and Criticism . Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1994
• Guerin, Wilfred L. et al. A Handbook of Critical Approaches to Literature. 4th Ed. New
York: OUP, 1999.
• Hall, Donald E. Literary and Cultural Theory: From Basic Principles to Advanced
Application. Boston: Houghton, 2001.
• Jefferson, Anne. and D. Robey, eds. Modern Literary Theory: A Comparative
Introduction. London: Batsford, 1986.
• Keesey, Donald. Contexts for Criticism. 4th Ed. Boston: McGraw Hill, 2003.
• Latimer, Dan. Contemporary Critical Theory. San Diego: Harcourt, 1989.
• Lentriccia, Frank. After the New Criticism. Chicago: Chicago UP, 1980.
• Lodge, David, with Nigel Wood. Modern Criticism and Theory: A Reader. 2nd Ed.
London: Longman, 1988.
• Magill, Frank N, ed. Critical Survey of Literary Theory. Pasadena: Salem Press, 1987.
• Makaryk, Irena R., ed. Encyclopedia of Contemporary Literary Theory: Approaches,
Scholars, Terms. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1993.
• Murfin, Ross and Ray, Supryia M. The Bedford Glossary of Critical and Literary Terms.
Boston: Bedford/St.Martin's, 2003.
• Natoli, Joseph, ed. Tracing Literary Theory. Chicago: U of Illinois P, 1987.
• Patai, Daphne and Will H. Corral. Theory's Empire: An Anthology of Dissent. New York:
Columbia UP, 2005.
• Sarup, Madan. An Introductory Guide to to Post-Structuralism and Postmodernism.
Athens: U of Georgia P, 1989.
• Selden, Raman and Peter Widdowson. A Reader's Guide to Contemporary Literary
Theory. 3rd Ed. Lexington: U of Kentucky P, 1993.
• Staton, Shirley F., ed. Literary Theories in Praxis. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P,
1987.
• Tyson, Lois. Critical Theory Today: A User-Friendly Guide. New York & Long: Garland
Publishing, 1999.
• Walder, Dennis, ed. Literature in the Modern World: Critical Essays and Documents.
2nd Ed. OUP, 2004.
• Wolfreys, Julian. ed. Introducing Literary Theories: A Guide and Glossary . Edinburgh:
Edinburgh University Press, 2003.
Literary Criticism Syllabus
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