Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

23
Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴吴吴 142200324

Transcript of Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

Page 1: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key

Concepts, Terms, and Devices

吴怡雯142200324

Page 2: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•Form external form

e.g. Define sonnet, couplets, tercets, ottava rima, quatrains, Spenserian stanza, blank verse, free verse etc.

Sonnet 18

QuatrainⅠ:A : Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?B : Thou art more lovely and more temperate.A : Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,B : And summer's lease hath all too short a date.

Page 3: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

QuatrainⅡ:C : Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,

D : And often is his gold complexion dimm'd;

C : And every fair from fair sometime declines,

D : By chance or nature's changing course untrimmed.

Quatrain Ⅲ:E : But thy eternal summer shall not fade,

F : Nor lose possession of that fair thou ow'st;

E : Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,

F : When in eternal lines to time thou grow'st.

Couplet:G : So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,

G : So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

Page 4: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•The formalist critic is only moderately interested in external forms.

•The process of formalistic analysis is complete only when everything in the work has been accounted for in terms of its overall form.

Page 5: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form•Organic Form:

Important to the New Critics

Inherited from the English Romantics

Page 6: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•The notion may go so far as Wordsworthian pantheism, or what some thought to be pantheism, where a breeze in nature may awaken within the persona of the Prelude.

•Pantheism is the belief that the Universe (or nature as the totality of everything) is identical with divinity, or that everything composes an all-encompassing, immanent god. ——Wikipedia

Page 7: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form•Coleridge: The Eolian Harp Aeolian lyre or harp•Shelley: Ode to the West / Defence of Poetry

Page 8: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic FormIf I were a dead leaf thou mightest bear;

If I were a swift cloud to fly with thee:

A wave to pant beneath thy power , and share

The impulse of thy strength, only less free

Than thou, O uncontrollable! If even

I were as im my boyhood, and could be

The comrade of thy wanderigs over Heaven,

As then, when to outstrip thy skiey speed

Scarce seem'd a vision; I would ne'er have striven

As thus with thee in prayer in my sore need.

Oh, lift me as a wave , a leaf, a cloud!

I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed!

A heavy weight of hours has chained and bowed

One too like thee: tameless, and swift, and proud.

Page 9: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•Assumption: a given literary experience takes a shape proper to itself, or at the least that the shape and the experience are functions of each other

•e.g. the interrelationships of a plot and subplot in Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Henry IV, Part 1, or The Tempest; or in the complex stream of consciousness of Joyce’s Ulysses or Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury

•Seeming paradox: the absence of the form is the form, precisely

Page 10: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•Local texture and logical structure proposed by Ransom

The logical structure refers to the argument or the concept within the work; local texture comprises the particular details and devices of the work (e.g. specific metaphors and images)

•Brooks “heresy of paraphrase”•The form of a poem is the organization of the material…for the creation of the total effect.”

——Brook & Warren ( Understanding Poetry)

Page 11: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

A. Form and Organic Form

•Modern criticism has shown that to speak of content as such is not to speak of art at all, but of experience; and that it is only when we speak of achieved content, the form, the work of art as a work of art, that we speak as critics. The difference between content, or experience, and achieved content, or art, is technique•Technique is the only means has of discovering, exploring, developing his subject, of conveying its meaning, and, finally, of evaluating it.

—— Mark Schorer (Technique as Discovery)

Page 12: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

B. Texture, Image, Symbol•Imagery + Metaphor = An integral part of the work

•Aristotle discussed metaphor in his Poetics•New Critics emphasize on the consistency of imagery texture (John Crowe Ransom) interest in Metaphysical poetry & conceit (e.g. the publication of Herbert Grierson’s collection Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems of the Seventeenth Century)

Page 13: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

B. Texture, Image, SymbolTHE FLEA.

by John Donne

O stay, three lives in one flea spare,

Where we almost, yea, more than married are.

This flea is you and I, and this

Our marriage bed, and marriage temple is.

Though parents grudge, and you, we're met,

And cloister'd in these living walls of jet.

Though use make you apt to kill me,

Let not to that self-murder added be,

 And sacrilege, three sins in killing three.

Page 14: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

B. Texture, Image, SymbolWhen The Lamp Is Shattered

When the lamp is shattered,

The light in the dust lies dead;

When the cloud is scattered,

The rainbow's glory is shed;

When the lute is broken,

Sweet tones are remembered not;

When the lips have spoken,

Loved accents are soon forgot.

As music and splendor

Survive not the lamp and the lute,

The heart's echoes render

No song when the spirit is mute:--

No song but sad dirges,

Like the wind through a ruined cell,

Or the mournful surges

That ring the dead seaman's knell.

Page 15: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

B. Texture, Image, Symbol•Symbol = image takes on meaning beyond its objective self

•Dilemma for some formalistic critics

•Symbol is a way of using something integral to the work to reach beyond the work and engage the world of value outside the work.(e.g. the apparent happenstance of events in a naturalistic writer like Thomas Hardy)

•Question this reductionism

Keats’s Grecian urn, whether beauty and truth are indeed the same

Emerson’s speaker in “The Rhodora”, who said that “beauty is its own excuse for being”

Page 16: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

C. Fallacies•Intentional Fallacy: not divorce the literary work from any intention that the author might have had for the work

•Affective Fallacy: the work is judged by its effect on the reader or viewer, particularly its emotional effect

Page 17: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

C. Fallacies

•The work must give us from within itself any intention that might be garner, and we must not go to the author for his or her intention: at the very least the author is not a reliable witness.

—— Wimsatt & Beardsley, The Verbal Icon (1954)

•No work of literary art can be divorced from the reader and therefore from the reader’s response.

•The formalistic approach is correct in urging caution

Page 18: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

D. Point of View•A virtue in the work of literary art•A nonexistent point of view flaws the work•We grant the omniscient narrator

•Wayne Booth: narrators may be either reliable or unreliable

e.g. Jake Barnes (The Sun Also Rises) is a completely reliable narrator for his “Hemingway code”

The lawyer in Melville’s Bartleby the Scrivener is unreliable in his early evaluations of himself for his lack of humanity

•In a first-person narration, the author may condition the form even more. (e.g. Huckleberry Finn)

•Shifting point of view (e.g. Chaucer The Canterbury Tale)

•Multiple points of view (Faulkner The Sound and the Fury)

Page 19: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

E. The Speaker’s Voice

•In lyric poetry, the tone of voice is analogous to point of view

•In a lyric there is a speaker——that is, a first-person situation; possibly a hearer, a second person

•Both the speaker and hearer condition the experience

•Robert Browning “Andrea del Sarto”:

Andrea is addressing a woman and they are among his paintings at certain time of day

Page 20: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

E. The Speaker’s VoiceSongJohn Donne

GO and catch a falling star,Get with child a mandrake root,Tell me where all past years are,Or who cleft the devil's foot,Teach me to hear mermaids singing,Or to keep off envy's stinging,And findWhat windServes to advance an honest mind.

Page 21: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

E. The Speaker’s Voice

If thou be'st born to strange sights,Things invisible to see,Ride ten thousand days and nights,Till age snow white hairs on thee,Thou, when thou return'st, wilt tell me,All strange wonders that befell thee,And swear,No whereLives a woman true and fair.

If thou find'st one, let me know,Such a pilgrimage were sweet;Yet do not, I would not go,Though at next door we might meet,Though she were true, when you met her,And last, till you write your letter,Yet sheWill beFalse, ere I come, to two, or three.

•The way the reader hears the speaker will condition the poem and may make the poem into poems by varying the voice

Page 22: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.

F. Tension, Irony, Paradox•Tension is the resolution of opposites, often in irony and paradox

•The basic terms —— tension, irony, paradox ——are often nearly indistinguishable, so closely do they work together

•C. Hugh Holman and William Harmon:

“A term introduced by Allen Tate, meaning the integral unity that results from the successful resolution of the conflicts of abstraction and concreteness, of general and particular, of denotation and connotation… Good poetry, Tate asserts, is the ‘full, organized body of all the extension and intension that we can find in it.' This concept has been widely used by the New Critics, particularly of poetry as a pattern of paradox or as a form of irony.”

Page 23: Constants of the Formalistic Approach: Some Key Concepts, Terms, and Devices 吴怡雯 142200324.