Monday, February 7, 2011

Class Notes: January 24-February 4

Class Notes: January 24-February 4
We’ve been reading Heart of Darkness and studying other pertinent information.

Archetypal and Mythological Criticism
·        A myth is a complete story while an archetype can be a plot, a character, a setting, or a symbolic object
·        James Frazer: anthropologist that begins to notice similarities in myths across cultures (ex: death-rebirth myth)
·        Carl Jung: archetypes spring from the “collective unconscious”
·        Joseph Campbell: the “monomyth”
·        Northrop Frye: developed these ideas into a type of literary criticism
Mythoi: archetypal narrative patterns
Mode: variations in ancient narrative patterns as a result of cultural tastes of the work’s historical period
Displacement: variations in ancient narrative patterns as a result of the individual personality of the author
Frye’s Romance
·        Early literature; the first type of story to develop
·        Hero begins at the top of society, goes on a quest, reaches the bottom of society (the “belly of the whale,” and then resurfaces at the top of society
·        Example: The Odyssey
Frye’s Tragedy
·        The second form of literature to develop (Middle Ages and Renaissance)
·        The hero makes a fatal error or has a fatal flaw that causes him to fall
·        Desirable to undesirable circumstances
·        Hero often functions as a cultural embodiment
·        “This is what happens when you don’t stay in line with society”
Frye’s Comedy
·        The third form of literature to develop (Victorian Era, Romantic Era, Great Depression)
·        Undesirable to desirable circumstances (opposite of tragedy)
·        Tends to end with marriage and unexpected wealth
·        Societal reinforcement that even common folk can end up happy and successful
·        Discourages social friction
Frye’s Irony
·        The last form of literature to develop
·        Anti-Romance essentially
·        Hero begins at the bottom of society, begins to move up the social ladder, is happy for a while, and then descends back to the “belly of the whale”l
·        Enforces the idea that life and society are meaningless
·        Examples: Death of a Salesman, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

Everyman
·        A short play of about 900 lines
·        “we can take with us from this word nothing that we have received, only what we have given” (Everyman handout)
·        The Everyman character is the important part (the main character who represents all of humankind)

Medievalism and Allegory
·        Europe’s Middle Ages (c. 500-1500 A.D.)
·        Christian-dominated era
·        Beowulf, The Canterbury Tales]
Allegory
·        An extended metaphor
·        Not ambiguous like symbolism is
·        Reinforces the social system, because of the Middle Ages’ homogeneity of belief
·        Becomes extremely prominent during the Middle Ages (seen as a hallmark of Medieval literature)
·        Usually concerned with important things, but sometimes satirical too
·        During the Middle Ages, characters usually represented things like envy, truth, gluttony, etc.
·        Example: The Wizard of Oz (and populism)
The Divine Comedy
·        Dante Alighieri wrote it sometime between 1308 and 1321
·        Three-part epic (Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso)
·        Dante travels through hell, purgatory, and heaven
·        Virgil and Beatrice (Dante’s lifelong love, NOT his wife) lead him throughout the epic
·        Introduces the ideas of the circle and the great chain of being

The Novel
·        Novella: “little new thing”
·        Or a roman: derived from the term romance
·        Novel: a fictional prose narrative of considerable length (30,000-100,000 words) and complexity that deals imaginatively with human experience
·        First European novel is usually considered to be Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes (the first part of which was published in 1605)
·        Must have literary merit (a piece of mass market fiction is NOT a novel)
·        Not applied to prose narratives written before the 18th century
·        Always fiction, but not always prose
·        Always contain narrative
·        Types include: Prose Romance, Novel of Incident, Novel of Character, Novel of Manners, Epistolary Novel, Picaresque Novel, Historical Novel, Regional Novel, Bildungsroman, Roman a clef, Roman-fleuve, Sociological, Stream of Consciousness, Gothic, Gothic Romance, and Satirical
By the second half of the 19th Century, the novel had displaced other forms of literature.  Why?
·        The growing middle class and their increased literacy rate and disposable income
·        Cheaper production and distribution of materials
·        Publication of novels in serial form
·        The introduction of a system of circulating libraries

Important Literary Terms
·        Anaphora: emphasizing words by repeating them at the beginnings of neighboring clauses
·        Antistrophe: the repetition of the same word or words at the end of successive phrases
·        Anadiplosis: the repetition of a word or phrase from the end of one clause or phrase at the beginning of the next clause or phrase
·        Polysyndeton: the repetition of conjunctions in a series of coordinate words, phrases, or clauses
·        Alliteration, Assonance, and Consonance
·        Antithesis: establishing a clear, contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together of juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure
·        Chiasmus: figure of speech in which two or more clauses are related to each other through a reversal of structures in order to make a larger point; that is, the clauses display inverted parallelism

Basic Trends in Western Literature (Classical to Postmodernist)
·        Shift of power
·        Powerful/strong dissolves into less powerful/disorderly
·        Focus moves from God to man and from knowing to not knowing

3 comments:

  1. Pass - Very thorough notes! I think you can add more connections to your notes though.

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  2. Wow...nice notes! I really like how you organized these. You copied down pretty much every single thing we did in class though - it might be easier for you to just put down the things that you don't know so that when you're studying you don't have to sort what you do or don't know.

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  3. Passs..really good notes, again. Well organized, good connections. Perhaps a little lengthy and detailed, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.

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