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English Literature

Glossary of Literary Terms

Abstract Expressionism
A form of art in which the artist expresses himself purely through the use of form and colour. It is non-
representational, or non-objective, art, which means that there are no concrete objects represented. It was one
of the first purely American art movements and is usually associated with New York in the 1940s - ‘60s.

In terms of art history, the movement can be broadly divided into two groups: action painters such as
Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning who put the focus on the physical action involved in painting, and
colour field painters such as Kenneth Noland and Mark Rothko who were primarily concerned with
exploring the effect of pure colour on a canvas.

Abstract Expressionism is closely linked to several literary movements, particularly Imagism


and Postmodernism. The New York School of writers, led by poets John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch and Frank
O'Hara, were actively involved in the appreciation and promotion of Abstract Expressionism in America.
Many of their poems attempt to replicate in lyric form what the painters were doing on canvas. [Jonathan
Ellis]

Aestheticism
The doctrine that aesthetic values - judgements about beauty - are the most important in assessing a work
of art, and that art is an end in itself and does not require a religious, moral, or didactic purpose. The outlook,
encapsulated in Theophile Gautier’s dictum ‘l’art pour l’art’, (‘art for art’s sake’), was popular in France
through much of the nineteenth century, and gave rise to the English Aesthetic Movement of the late
nineteenth century, influenced particularly by the critic and Oxford University tutor Walter Pater (1839-
1894). Oscar Wilde (1854-1900) was one of the most outspoken proponents of the movement, which
influenced the poetry and painting of the pre-Raphaelites, and the early poetry of W. B. Yeats (1865-1939).

Alliteration
In poetry: the repetition of sounds in closely associated words. The term is usually applied to the
repetition of consonants, particularly when they are the first letter of the words, but can apply to any stressed
consonants. The term is sometimes used to refer to repeated vowel sounds, though the term more often used
in this case is ‘assonance’. e.g. O wild West Wind

Angry Young Men


A term coined by literary journalists in the 1950s to describe the writers at the forefront of a new trend of
social realism and anti-establishment attitudes in fiction and drama. The phrase Angry Young Man was used
in 1951 as the title of the autobiography of Leslie Allen Paul, a co-founder of the Woodcraft Folk youth
movement, but its application in 1956 was inspired by the title of John Osborne’s play Look Back in Anger,
which struck the keynote for the new trend. Other writers often grouped under this heading are Arnold

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Wesker, Kingsley Amis, John Braine, John Wain, and Alan Sillitoe.

Anti-hero / anti-heroic
A protagonist in a work of literature who lacks, and may be opposed to, traditional heroic virtues such as
courage, confidence, and virtue, and may have characteristics traditionally associated with a villain. He may
be a flawed character who fails where a conventional hero would succeed, or his attitudes might be intended
to subvert the idea of a literary hero, or of what society might consider to be heroic.

Examples are Jimmy Porter in John Osborne’s Look Back in Anger (1956), and many of the protagonists
in the works of the Angry Young Men, particularly Smith in The Loneliness of the Long Distance
Runner (1959) by Alan Sillitoe. Absurdist antiheroes appeared in the Theatre of the Absurd, for example
Vladimir and Estragon in Waiting for Godot (1952) by Samuel Beckett, and their counterparts, Rosencrantz
and Guildenstern in Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead (1966) by Tom Stoppard.

Assonance
In poetry: a repetition of similar vowel sounds in words of close proximity, particularly in stressed
syllables. A form of imperfect rhyme, where the vowels rhyme but not the consonants. e.g. know - home -
goat - go.

Beat literature / Beat writers / Beat generation


A style of literature which emerged in America in the 1950s, influenced by the poet Allen
Ginsberg (1926-1997) and the novelist Jack Kerouac (1922-1969), two of the best-known works being
Ginsberg's Howl (1956), and Kerouac's On the Road (1957). They themselves were influenced by William
Burroughs (1914-1977), best known as the author of The Naked Lunch (1959). Beat writers had little regard
for the formal conventions of literature, and put all the emphasis on spontaneity and self-expression, their
loosely-structured style reflecting the influence of the jazz music of the time. The term's origins are variously
said to be the 'beatitude' of the state of mind to which they aspired, the 'beat' of jazz music, or 'beaten' as in
'worn out', or ‘defeated’.

The movement was associated with the idea of 'dropping out' of materialistic middle-class life, to pursue a
form of freedom and spiritual exploration. They were forerunners of the Hippie counter-culture of the 1960s.
Ginsberg visited England in the 1960s, and his spontaneous style and emphasis on poetry as live
performance influenced The Liverpool Poets.

Bildungsroman
A German word meaning a 'novel of education', referring to a novel taking as its theme the development
of an individual from childhood to adulthood, following the protagonist's search for his or her own identity.
The form was common in German literature, the archetype being Goethe's Wilhelm Meister Lehrjahre(1795-
6). In English literature the term is more applicable to novels of the 19th century, such as David
Copperfield by Charles Dickens, but can also be applied to A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916)
by James Joyce.

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Black Mountain Poets
A group of avant-garde American poets writing during the 1950s that included Charles Olson, Robert
Duncan, and Robert Creeley. These poets shared ties to Black Mountain College, in North Carolina, an
experimental school of art that operated from 1933 until its closing in 1956, and to its literary review, The
Black Mountain Review. The poets are also sometimes referred to as ‘projectivist’ poets because of their
shared interest in Charles Olson’s ‘projectivist verse’. [Trenton Hickman]

Bloomsbury Group
A group of writers, artists, and critics centred around Vanessa and Virginia Stephen (later Vanessa Bell
and Virginia Woolf) and their home in the Bloomsbury area of London in the early years of the twentieth
century. Opposed to the social constraints of their age, they had a modernising liberal outlook, and made
significant achievements in their fields, though they were accused by some of elitism.

Chicana / Chicano
See Latino/a literature

Confessional poetry
An approach to poetry in which the poet employs his or her own life and feelings as subject matter, often
using verse as an outlet for powerful emotions. The attitude was a break from the view that poetry should be
impersonal, advocated by T. S. Eliot. The style emerged in America with Robert Lowell’s volume Life
Studies (1959), other practitioners being John Berryman (1914-1972), Anne Sexton (1928-1974), and Sylvia
Plath (1932-1963).

Constative
The use of language to indicate a state of affairs which exists, in contrast to language used
‘performatively’ - to initiate an action. See Performative.

Dadaism
A European art movement, characterised by an anarchic protest against bourgeois society, founded in
1916 by the Rumanian-born French poet, Tristan Tzara (1896-1963). Part of the motivation behind the
movement was the wish to express a sense of outrage in response to the First World War, and the culture
which had brought it about. The main centre of Dadaism was Paris, but it also flourished in America, the
main proponents of the two centres being Marcel Duchamp (1887-1968) and Man Ray (1890-1976)
respectively. The movement was superseded by Surrealism from around 1922.

Deconstruction / deconstruct
A concept originating in poststructuralist critical theory, deriving from the work of Jacques Derrida
(1930- ), which is used in many ways. It refers to the analysis of a text taking into account that its meaning is
not fixed but can vary according to the way in which the writer, and reader, interpret language. Instead of
looking for meanings, deconstruction aims to analyse concepts and modes of thought to expose the
preconceived ideas on which they are founded.

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Dystopia / dystopian
A Greek term which means a bad place, or the opposite of Utopia. The negative characteristics of a
dystopia serve as a warning of possible social and political developments to be avoided. Examples of
modern novels which depict dystopias are Nineteen Eighty-four by George Orwell (1903-1950), andBrave
New World by Aldous Huxley (1894-1963).

Existentialism / Existential
A European movement in philosophy which became particularly influential after the Second World War.
Some of the leading proponents were Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), Albert Camus (1913-1960), and Jean-
Paul Sartre (1905-1980). The existentialist world-view sees human existence as ultimately meaningless - a
situation which causes ‘angst’, or dread - but at the same time emphasises the importance of each individual
taking responsibility for his or her own choices concerning decisions and actions. Existentialism was a direct
influence on the dramatists of the Theatre of the Absurd, such as Samuel Beckett, and on the British
novelists Iris Murdoch, John Fowles, and Muriel Spark.

Feminist / womanist
Feminist writing and criticism highlights the position of women in literature, society, and world culture,
emphasising that the roles and experiences of women tend to be marginalised by patriarchal societies.
Feminist writers and critics attempt to redress the balance by writing literature and criticism from the point
of view of women. A key feminist work from the modern period is A Room of One’s Own (1929)
by Virginia Woolf.

The term ‘womanist’ is sometimes used to refer to black feminists, to distinguish their approach from that
of mainstream white middle-class feminism.

Formalism
An artistic and critical sensibility in American and British literature and criticism which reached its
greatest influence between 1930 and 1950, and which promoted a view of art as ‘objective’ - that is, that the
work in itself was more important than the subjective contexts of its artistic production. In formalism, the
proper focus of artistic creation and criticism is the art object itself, rather than the author or artist’s
thoughts, intentions, or other personal sensibilities. In the case of literature, formalism assumes that well-
wrought form (the structure of the literary piece, its constituent images, metaphors, and other ‘building
blocks’) can carry the most important dimensions of content from the author to the reader without reference
to contextual elements. Much of post-war literature in both Great Britain and the United States can be seen
as a reaction to this extreme view, as poets and writers actively sought to reintroduce subjectivities into
literary production and study as a way of reclaiming the ‘personal’ in literary experience. [Trenton Hickman]

Freud, Sigmund / Freudian


By revolutionising our understanding of the inner workings of the human mind, the process of personality
development, and the motives behind human behaviour, the Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud (1856-
1939) was a major influence on twentieth century thought. Freud showed the importance of the unconscious
in all aspects of human life, and developed techniques of psychoanalysis and dream interpretation as ways of
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gaining access to it. In art Freud was a direct influence on Surrealism, and in English literature was a direct
influence on W. H. Auden, D. H. Lawrence, and Iris Murdoch.

Georgian poets
Poets active during the early part of the reign of George V, (1910-1936), including Rupert Brooke,
Edmund Blunden, Walter de la Mare, and Edward Thomas. They wrote delicate lyrical poetry, often
concerned with nature. Their style was a break from the poetry of the late nineteenth century, and the
decadence which had evolved from aestheticism. In the 1920s they were overshadowed by the Modernist
innovations of Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot.

Gothic / Southern Gothic


Gothic literature deals with macabre, supernatural, subject matter, aimed at inducing fear and a sense of
dread. The form became popular in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, classics of the genre
being The Castle of Otranto (1765) by Horace Walpole (1717-1797), The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794) by
Ann Radcliffe (1764-1823), The Monk (1796) by Matthew Gregory Lewis (1775-1818),
and Frankenstein (1818) by Mary Shelley (1797-1851).

In the context of modern literature the term is still used to describe literature with macabre, horrifying
subject matter, such as much of the work of Beryl Bainbridge.

In modern American literature the term Southern Gothic is applied to works by writers from the Southern
States of the USA, whose stories are often set in that region, and include macabre or fantastic incidents in
their plots. Examples are, William Faulkner (1897-1962), Tennessee Williams (1911-1883), Carson
McCullers (1917-1967), Flannery O'Connor (1925-1964), and Harper Lee (1926- ).

Group, The
A name sometimes given to a group of British poets who, in the late 1950s and 1960s, wanted to take
poetry in a new direction by liberating it from the restraints favoured by The Movement. The main poets
were Ted Hughes, Peter Porter, George Macbeth, Peter Redgrove, and Alan Brownjohn.

Harlem Renaissance
A flourishing of African-American literature which took place in the 1920s and was centredaround the
Harlem district of New York City. The movement took African-American life and culture as its subject
matter, some of its major writers being James Weldon Johnson (1871-1938), Zora Neale Hurston (1903-
1960), Langston Hughes (1902-1967), and Countee Cullen (1903-1946).

Hippie / Hippy movement


A movement of young people, in America and Europe in the 1960s, who rejected conventional values and
morality and adopted a rootless, or communal style of living. Many used, and advocated the use of,
psychoactive drugs, such as marijuana and LSD, to achieve altered states of awareness. Their ideals were
those of peace and love, and they congregated at rock festivals, culminating in the Woodstock festival of
1969. Their main art forms were psychedelic music, posters, and light shows. The American writers Allen

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Ginsberg and Ken Kesey were associated with the movement.

Imagism / Imagist
The Imagists were a group of poets who were influenced by Ezra Pound, who in turn had been
influenced by the French Symbolist poets, Japanese haiku, and the writings of the poet and critic T. E.
Hulme (1883-1917). The Imagist movement, which originated in London and was prominent in England and
America from around 1912 to 1917, was crucial to the development of Modernist poetry. These poets aimed
to free poetry from the conventions of the time by advocating a free choice of rhythm and subject matter, the
diction of speech, and the presentation of meaning through the evocation of clear, precise, visual images.

Among the poets associated with Ezra Pound in this movement were Hilda Doolittle, Amy Lowell, and
William Carlos Williams. Pound later associated himself with Vorticism, and Amy Lowell took over the
leadership of the Imagist movement. Many English and American poets were influenced by Imagism, such
as D. H. Lawrence, T. S. Eliot, Conrad Aiken, Marianne Moore, and Wallace Stevens.

Intertext
A term used to denote a text referred to within a text. The Bible, the works of Shakespeare, and Classical
myths, for example, are frequently found as intertexts in works of literature. [Julie Ellam]

Intertextuality
A term which can refer to a text’s inclusion of intertexts, but is also a concept introduced by philosopher
and semiotician Julia Kristeva, and used in poststructuralist criticism, according to which a text is seen as not
only connecting the author to the reader, but also as being connected to all other texts, past and present. Thus
there is a limit to the extent to which an individual text can be said to be original or unique, and a limit to the
extent to which an individual author can be said to be the originator of a text. [Julie Ellam]

Irish Cultural Revival / Irish Literary Revival


Also called Irish Literary Renaissance, Celtic Renaissance, or Celtic Revival. A revival of Irish literature
in the late nineteenth century, driven primarily by W. B. Yeats. The aim was to create a distinctive Irish
literature by drawing on Irish history and folklore. In the 1880s the Gaelic League attempted to revive the
Irish language, but the use of Gaelic was not a requirement of the revival led by Yeats in the 1890s. The
movement developed simultaneously with a rise in Irish nationalism, and a growth of interest in Gaelic
traditions.

Jung / Jungian
The theories of the Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) grew out of those of Sigmund Freud.
Having been originally closely associated with Freud, he broke away and developed his own theories, which
placed less emphasis on sexuality, and more on symbolism, the collective unconscious, and archetypes.
Many artists, including the British novelist John Fowles, have been influenced by Jung’s ideas, particularly
his emphasis on the importance of myths and symbols.

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Latino/a literature
Literature written in English for an English-speaking audience by American writers of Latin-American
heritage, such as the Puerto Rican American (sometimes called ‘Nuyorican’, since many of these writers are
‘New York Puerto Ricans’), Cuban-American, Dominican-American, and Mexican-American (often called
‘Chicano/a’) writers. Latino/a (‘Latino’ if male, ‘Latina’ if female) writers were the big literary phenomenon
of the 1990s in the United States. [Trenton Hickman]

Magic realism
Fiction which displays a mingling of the mundane with the fantastic, giving the narrative dual dimensions
of realism and fantasy. One of its purposes is to draw attention to the fact that all narrative is an invention.
The technique is mainly associated with South American writers, such as Jorge Luis Borges and Gabriel
GarcíaMárquez, but has also been used by writers such as the British Angela Carter, and the Anglo-
Indian Salman Rushdie.

Marx, Karl / Marxist


The theories of the German social scientist and revolutionary Karl Heinrich Marx (1818-1883) have had a
profound effect on political and economic thought throughout the world since the mid-nineteenth century.
His best-known works are The Communist Manifesto (1848), written with Friedrich Engels (1820-1895),
and Das Kapital (1867-95). His writings, based on an analysis of capitalist society in which he saw the
workers as being exploited, emphasised the importance of class struggle and change through conflict.

In English Literature Marx was an influence on the political dimension of works by writers of the 1930s
such as W. H. Auden and Cecil Day-Lewis.

Marxist criticism
Literary criticism deriving from the theories of Marx, which emphasises the cultural and political context
in which the text was produced.

Metafiction / metanarrative
Fiction about fiction. An approach in which the writer draws attention to the process by which the author
and the reader together create the experience of fiction, implicitly questioning the relationship between
fiction and reality. This postmodern technique was used in The French Lieutenant’s Woman (1969) and
other novels by John Fowles.

Modern
The term ‘modern’ can apply to a wide variety of different historical periods in different contexts. In the
context of ‘modern literature’ it is generally taken to refer to the period from 1914, the outbreak of the First
World War, to the present day. When capitalised, ‘Modern’ can refer to Modernism.

Modernism / Modernist
A movement in all the arts in Europe, with its roots in the nineteenth century but flourishing in the period
during and after the First World War. The period 1910 to 1930 is sometimes called the period of ‘high
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Modernism’. The War having undermined faith in order and stability in Europe, artists and writers sought to
break with tradition and find new ways of representing experience.

Some of the characteristic features of modernist literature are: a drawing of inspiration from European
culture as a whole; experimentation with form, such as the fragmentation and discontinuity found in the free
verse of ‘The Waste Land’ by T. S. Eliot; the radical approach to plot, time, language, and character
presentation as seen in Ulysses by James Joyce and the novels of Virginia Woolf; a decrease in emphasis
on morality, and an increase in subjective, relative, and uncertain attitudes; in poetry, a move towards
simplicity and directness in the use of language.

Dada, Surrealism, The Theatre of the Absurd, and stream of consciousness are all aspects of Modernism.

Movement, The
The name given to a generation of British poets who came to prominence in the 1950s, of whom the best-
known was Philip Larkin (1922-1985). Disliking the free form and emotional tone of poets such as Dylan
Thomas and W. S. Graham, they initiated a style of verse which was intellectual, witty, and carefully
crafted. Their work gained prominence in the anthology New Lines (1956), edited by Robert Conquest.
Other Movement poets included Thom Gunn, Kingsley Amis, D. J. Enright, and John Wain.

Naturalism / naturalist
A term often used interchangeably with Realism, but which has a more specific meaning suggesting that
human life is controlled by natural forces such as those explored in the natural sciences, particularly those
expounded by Charles Darwin (1809-1882). Naturalist writers aimed to create accurate representations of
characters and their interaction with their environment based on scientific truth. The movement was
particularly associated with the nineteenth-century French novelist Emile Zola (1840-1902), and influenced
the English writers George Gissing (1857-1903) and Arnold Bennett (1867-1931).

New Apocalypse / New Romantics


Movements in British Poetry which flourished in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when Dylan
Thomas was the foremost poet. The poets behind the movements were Henry Treece (1911-1966), George
Granville Barker, (1913-1991), W. S. Graham (1918-1986), J. F. Hendry (1912-1986), and Dorian Cooke.
They reacted against the politically-orientated realist poetry of the '30s by drawing inspiration from
mythology and the unconscious. Their work is generally regarded by critics as having little merit, being
vastly inferior to that of Thomas.

The New Criticism


A movement in literary criticism which developed in the USA in the 1940s, and which aimed to approach
literary texts in an ‘objective’ way, as self-contained objects of study, without reference to such contextual
factors as the author’s biography, or intentions. One of the main texts of the movement wasUnderstanding
Poetry (1938), by Cleanthe Brooks (1906-1994) and Robert Penn Warren (1905-1989). The movement was
influenced by the British critic I. A. Richards (1893-1979), and his books Principles of Literary
Criticism (1924), Science and Poetry (1926), and Practical Criticism (1929). Richards, in turn, had been

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influenced by the critical stance of F. R. Leavis (1895-1978), and T. S. Eliot (1888-1965).

The New Journalism


A mid-twentieth-century American literary aesthetic practised by writers such as Thomas Wolfe and
Norman Mailer, which privileges a lively, newspaper-style ‘novelization’ of actual events but from a
subjective narratorial point of view, fusing the art of novel writing with the quirky accessibility of the
journalist as character and participant. [Trenton Hickman]

New York School


A group of American poets who lived and worked in and around New York City during the mid-twentieth
century, including Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch, and James Schuyler. The aesthetic of these
poets evidences a shared interest in abstract expressionist art as well as in American popular cultural subjects
such as jazz and movies. Their poetry magnifies these interests and elevates them through sophisticated
intellectual treatment into smart, witty, verbal ‘gymnastics’ of verse. [Trenton Hickman]

Omniscient narrator
See viewpoint.

Onomatopoeia
In poetry: a word whose sound resembles the sound to which it refers, or whose sound suggests the sound
of something associated with its meaning. e.g. buzz, splash.

Other / otherness
A concept central to postcolonial criticism, referring to the way colonised people and places were seen as
alien, subordinate, and implicitly, inferior, from the point of view of the colonising culture. The concept can
be extended into other areas, such as when feminist criticism sees women as being put in the position of
‘other’ by a patriarchal point of view.

P.E.N.
International Association of Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists, and Novelists. International P.E.N.
was founded in London in 1921 by Mrs. C. A. Dawson Scott. Its first president was John Galsworthy. The
only world-wide association of writers, its aims are to:
1. Promote intellectual co-operation and understanding among writers. 2. Create a world community of
writers that would emphasise the central role of literature in the development of world culture. 3. Defend
literature against the many threats to its survival which the modern world poses.
[www.internationalpen.org.uk]

Performative / performativity
'Performative' indicates the special qualities brought out through a 'performance' of something (for
example, a play text or poem) or in some cases, an artistic event which has no originating text (such as in
performance art). The 'performance' is a time-and-space bound event, which is ephemeral (it never happens
exactly the same way twice). A further, related meaning (derived from the philosophy of J. L. Austin) is that

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of doing or making something happen, rather than stating or representing it. This leads to the idea that the
'performative' is how symbolic systems (language, art, theatre) both represent things from the world, but are
also simultaneously making that world.

'Performativity' is a related term. It is the ability of something to be 'performative' or else that it should be
seen as constructed through performative means. Judith Butler, the cultural theorist, argues that 'gender' for
example is constructed through performance. [Steven Barfield]

Point of view
See viewpoint

Pop art
Art movement in Britain and America in the late 1950s and 1960s in which elements from everyday life,
popular culture, and the mass media were used as subject matter. Not always taken seriously by critics or the
public, pop art could be seen partly as a liberating attack on more conventional art, and partly as a response
to a mechanised, media and advertising-saturated, modern world. American pop artists included Andy
Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein. British representatives included Peter Blake and David Hockney. Pop art had
a direct influence on The Liverpool Poets.

Postcolonial literature
Literature written in the language of former colonisers by natives of their colonies. Usually, literature
written in English by writers from former colonies of Great Britain. The term usually applies to literature
written after the country has ceased to be a colony, but can also include literature written during the time of
colonisation.

Postcolonial criticism
Branch of literary criticism which focuses on seeing the literature and experience of peoples of former
colonies in the context of their own cultures, as opposed to seeing them from the perspective of the European
literature and criticism dominant during the time of the Empire.

Postmodern / Postmodernism
In a general sense, literature written since the Second World War, i.e. after the Modernist era. In a more
specific sense the concept of postmodernism as a subject of study emerged in the 1980s, applying across
many disciplines, encouraging inter-disciplinary studies, and being interpreted in many ways.

The postmodern outlook is associated with the erosion of confidence in the idea of progress, as a result of
such phenomena as the holocaust, the threat of nuclear war, and environmental pollution.

In literature one of its manifestations is the attempts by some writers to examine and break down
boundaries involved in such issues as race, gender, and class, and to break down divisions between different
genres of literature. Other aspects of the postmodernist outlook are: a spirit of playfulness with the
fragmented world, the awareness of fiction as an artifice, and the creation of works as a pastiche of forms
from the past. Postmodern writers include Thomas Pynchon, John Fowles, Angela Carter, and Salman

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Rushdie.

In literary criticism such approaches as structuralism, poststructuralism, deconstruction, and postcolonial


criticism are postmodern methods.

Poststructuralism
A postmodern approach to literary criticism, and other disciplines, growing out of structuralism. Like
structuralism, it questions the relationship between language and reality, and it sees ‘reality’ as something
socially constructed.

Problematize
To produce or propose a debating point or problem out of given data. [Dr Margaret Sonmez]

Projectivism
A style of poetry innovated by American poet Charles Olson in his 1950 essay ‘Projective Verse’ and
adopted by others of the Black Mountain poets. Olson advocated a poetry that rebelled against the formalist,
New Critical poetry that preceded it by insisting that ‘form was never more than an extension of content’ and
that the poem should emerge line by line, driven by the measure of one’s breath and with ‘one perception’
necessarily ‘projecting’ itself into ‘a further perception’. In this manner, Olson and other projectivists hoped
that the speed, immediacy, and lack of predetermined poetic form would re-energise the poetry of their time
with a spontaneity and improvisational spirit that had been lost over the preceding decades. [Trenton
Hickman]

Pylon Poets
A name given to British poets of the 1930s who included industrial artefacts such as pylons in their
descriptions of landscape. The poets included W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender, Louis MacNeice, and Cecil
Day-Lewis. The nick-name originated in response to Stephen Spender’s poem ‘The Pylons’.

Realism / social realism / Socialist realism


Broadly - writing about people and settings which could really exist, and events which could really
happen. In particular the term Realism refers to a movement of nineteenth-century European art and
literature which rejected Classical models and Romantic ideals in favour of a realistic portrayal of actual life
in realistic settings, often focusing on the harsher aspects of life under industrialism and capitalism.
Forerunners in literature were the French novelist Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850), and the English novelist
George Eliot (1819-1880). In the twentieth century the writing of the Angry Young Men can be seen as a
reassertion of the values of realism.

‘Social realism’, a term borrowed from art criticism, is often used synonymously with ‘realism’.

‘Socialist realism’ refers to literature or criticism presented from the Marxist viewpoint.

Romantic
The term is used both in a general, and in a specific, way. The specific sense refers to Romanticism, a

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movement prevalent in European art, music, and literature in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries. The style was revolutionary in that it emphasised subjective experience, and favoured innovation
over adherence to traditional or Classical forms, and the expression of feeling over reason. In English
literature, William Wordsworth (1770-1850) and Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) were first-
generation Romantic poets, and Byron (1788-1824), Shelley (1792-1822), and Keats (1795-1821) were
second-generation Romantics.

In its more general application the term can refer to an attitude of mind which draws on imagination and
emotion rather than reason, and favours subjective, dream-like, or exotic experiences over realism.

Sprung rhythm
A name given by Gerard Manley Hopkins to his technique of breaking up the regular metre of poetry to
achieve versatile and surprising rhythms, which retained regularity but more closely resembled speech than
did conventional poetry.

Stream of consciousness
Sometimes called ‘continuous monologue’. Literary technique developed in the 1920s, as part
of Modernism which attempts to reproduce the moment-to-moment flow of subjective thoughts and
perceptions in an individual’s mind. The technique was used by Dorothy Richardson, James Joyce,
and Virginia Woolf. The term was originally coined by the American philosopher and psychologist William
James in Principles of Psychology (1890).

Structuralism
An approach to literary criticism which emphasises that a text does not have one fixed meaning, but is
open to any number of interpretations, depending on the meanings attributed to words by both the writer and
the reader. It is founded on the idea that the meanings of words are ultimately arbitrary, and instead of
looking for the meaning of a text, structural analysis aims to explore oppositions and conflicts within the
text, and the underlying structures of thought which produce meanings. The approach is based on the work
of the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913), and has been influential in the humanities since the
mid 1950s, being applied not only to literary texts but to a wide range of cultural phenomena.

Surrealism
An artistic and literary movement which grew out of Dadaism between 1917 and the 1920s. Influenced by
the writings of Sigmund Freud, the practitioners explored the world of dreams and the unconscious in their
art, emphasising the irrational dimensions of human experience. Leaders of the movement were the French
artists Guillaume Apollinaire (1880-1918), who coined the term in 1917, and André Breton (1896-1966).

Surrealists experimented with automatic writing, the technique, analogous to the free association method
of psychoanalysis, involving the attempt to achieve a state of mind in which rational thought is disengaged,
to allow words to arise spontaneously from the unconscious.

Symbolist / Symbolism
The Symbolist movement originated in France with the volume of poetry Les Fleurs du Mal (1857) by
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Charles Baudelaire (1821-1867), and was taken up by such poets as StéphaneMallarmé, Paul Verlaine,
Arthur Rimbaud, and Jules Laforgue. They aimed to break away from the formal conventions of French
poetry, and attempted to express the transitory perceptions and sensations of inner life, rather than rational
ideas. They believed in the imagination as the arbiter of reality, were interested in the idea of a
correspondence between the senses, and aimed to express meaning through the sound patterns of words and
suggestive, evocative images, rather than by using language as a medium for statement and argument.

The Symbolists were a major influence on British, Irish, and American writers such as W. B. Yeats, Ezra
Pound, T. S. Eliot, Dylan Thomas, e ecummings,Wallace Stevens, and William Faulkner.

Theatre of the Absurd


Avant-garde drama movement originating in the 1950s in Europe with dramatists such as Samuel
Beckett (1906-1989), Jean Genet (1910-1986), and Eugene Ionesco (1912-1994). Influenced philosophically
by Existentialism, and in particular by The Myth of Sisyphus (1943) by Albert Camus (1913-1960), they
expressed a world view in which there was no God, and life was meaningless. They had no faith in logic or
rational communication, feeling that attempts to construe meanings broke down into absurdity - ‘absurd’ in
this context meaning ‘out of harmony’ rather than ‘ridiculous’.

In their approach to the theatre they drew upon a tradition of comedy which can be traced from Roman
drama through the music hall, and into such as the silent comedies of Charlie Chaplin, and the surreal
comedies of the Marx Brothers of the 1930s and ‘40s.

Unreliable narrator
A fictional narrator whose views do not coincide with those of the author, or do not accurately represent
what ‘really’ happened in the story. Henry James was a master of the unreliable narrator technique. Writers
use subtle methods to let readers know that they cannot trust what the narrator says, setting up tension
between reader and narrative. One extreme example is seen in the novel Spider (1990) by Patrick McGrath,
in which the narrator, a schizophrenic, is unable to distinguish between reality and fantasy. Without
intruding on the first-person viewpoint, McGrath gradually allows the reader to understand that what the
narrator thinks is the truth is not the truth at all.

Utopia
A Greek term which means an imaginary perfect place. Even if the imagined place could never be
achieved in reality, its positive qualities represent ideals to be striven for. The term was coined by Thomas
More (1478-1535) who wrote his Utopia, a description of an ideal state, in 1516. Other examples of such
descriptions in the history of literature, include Francis Bacon’s New Atlantis (1626), and The Republic by
Plato (c.427-347 BC).

Viewpoint / Point of view


The viewpoint which the reader shares while reading a narrative. Fiction writers use three main
viewpoints: 1. The omniscient (all-knowing) narrator's viewpoint. The narrator of the story theoretically
knows everything about all the characters. Referring to them in the third-person, the author can tell us about
the characters in an objective way and switch between them at will, showing us what each is doing thinking
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and feeling at any time. 2. The first-person viewpoint, in which the narrator speaks as 'I' and conveys the
story through his/her own subjective experience. 3. The viewpoint of the main character, or characters, in the
story, but conveyed in the third-person. Here the narrative is ostensibly being presented by a narrator, in that
we read 'she did this', or 'he did that', but the narrator's viewpoint is merged with that of the character(s) so
that everything in the story is seen through the subjective experience of the character(s).

Vorticism
An approach to art and literature associated with the abstract artist Percy Wyndham-Lewis (1882-1957)
which sought to address industrial processes through art. Although mainly a movement in painting and
sculpture, Wyndham-Lewis, influenced by Imagist poetry, and collaborating with Ezra Pound, published
two issues of a journal named BLAST.

The War Poets


Name given to a group of British soldier-poets who became prominent during the First World War, the
best-known being Siegfried Sassoon (1886-1967), Rupert Brooke (1887-1915), Isaac Rosenberg (1890-
1918), and Wilfred Owen (1893-1918). The main impact of their poetry came through its depiction of the
horrors of war, bringing the reality of events home to the British public.

Womanist
See Feminist.

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