tZar
New Member
Okay, we had a rough start talking about deconstruction, so this time I will keep it simple – and when I say that it is probably very relative☺
I would like to talk a bit about new criticism, and I hope a few of you find it interesting – or at least as interesting as the piece on deconstruction. I also hope more will join in the dialogue.
So new criticism was created to put the text in focus, and not history, or social relations or the author etc. It tries to reclaim the text as autonomous (independent). This leads us to a few things to avoid when reading a text:
1: Avoid the intentional fallacy: This means that we cannot argue the meaning of a text, saying that it was what the author tried to convey. Basically what the author wanted with the text is irrelevant; only what the text wants is relevant!
2: Avoid the affective fallacy: This means that we should not confuse the texts intention with what it does to the reader. Do not make your reaction to a text a part of the text!
3: The text does not have meaning, it is: The text is its inner tensions, its structure, form disposition etc. This mean that we cannot draw out THE meaning of the text, it is not unambiguous.
So to read in a new critical manner we have to ‘close read’. This means that we dig deep into the text and use long time to read it. Making this a bit more clear I will put forth a model of getting into the text, but I must say already now, that analysing a text using a model, almost always works against the intention. The text is a living body, and cannot be grasped with an analytical model. Therefore, this is not something which should be used as a step-by-step tool to get the meaning out of a text. It is to clarify which aspects to look for in a text, and as soon as I have written this, I am sure I will regret it.
The following model takes in some aspects which are closely connected to reading poetry and short stories. I you were to look for all these aspects in a novel or longer prose text, you would probably die…
I will in the next post try shortly to address the use of new criticism when reading longer prose texts.
First of all. If it is a shorter text, a poem or such, or a real study of a text, then read it several times. Even try to find different narrations of the text: just read it slowly, read it out loud, have it read out loud. Basically get comfortably with the text, the style etc.
Secondly: Close reading means that you should be open to the text; open with feeling, experiences and knowledge, BUT it must be the text which regulates which of these preconditions is set into use. The rule is that we own the author the chance to get his say before we use his text in a personal context.
Also remember that the title is the first thing which we see of a text, but try to keep in mind that it often is the last thing the author gives the text; therefore try to start the interpretation in the first paragraph (this is not new criticism as such, just a common sense approach to the text!)
Now lets get to the text:
1: The graphical layer
- Look at the layout (some poems use layouts to add meaning. Visual pivoting points etc.)
- Paragraph/stanza lengths, visual effects, capitalization etc.
2: The sound layer
- Rhyme, rhythm, vowel sounds etc.
- Pace of the text: does it try to slow you down, or pick up your pace. This can be through the length of words, sentences, paragraphs or whole chapters.
3: Units of meaning
- Syntax (choice of words), symbolic names, themes, motifs or topics.
- Try to organise the words or names different ‘fields’. This helps to create coherence between parts.
4: The syntactical layer
- Analytical, synthetic usage of language, active/passive sentence constructions
- Word classes and how they are used
- Clauses – active/passive
5: The structural layer
- Metaphors
- Symbolic text
6: Large units
- Time
- Place
- Characters and plot
- Milieu
- Presented problems/ideas
- Composition
7: The narrator
- Who is telling the story (not the one who have written the story).
- Credibility
- The narrator opinions towards ideas, characters etc. (use of irony, pathos etc.)
Okay – now what is the text trying to tell us? What is the meaning?
I know that these points are all taking place at the same time when reading, here they are split up to create a general view.
Remember that you do not have to write a whole lot to do all this, you just have to give yourself time while reading. If this is all to complicated, notes are always a good help.
I would like to talk a bit about new criticism, and I hope a few of you find it interesting – or at least as interesting as the piece on deconstruction. I also hope more will join in the dialogue.
So new criticism was created to put the text in focus, and not history, or social relations or the author etc. It tries to reclaim the text as autonomous (independent). This leads us to a few things to avoid when reading a text:
1: Avoid the intentional fallacy: This means that we cannot argue the meaning of a text, saying that it was what the author tried to convey. Basically what the author wanted with the text is irrelevant; only what the text wants is relevant!
2: Avoid the affective fallacy: This means that we should not confuse the texts intention with what it does to the reader. Do not make your reaction to a text a part of the text!
3: The text does not have meaning, it is: The text is its inner tensions, its structure, form disposition etc. This mean that we cannot draw out THE meaning of the text, it is not unambiguous.
So to read in a new critical manner we have to ‘close read’. This means that we dig deep into the text and use long time to read it. Making this a bit more clear I will put forth a model of getting into the text, but I must say already now, that analysing a text using a model, almost always works against the intention. The text is a living body, and cannot be grasped with an analytical model. Therefore, this is not something which should be used as a step-by-step tool to get the meaning out of a text. It is to clarify which aspects to look for in a text, and as soon as I have written this, I am sure I will regret it.
The following model takes in some aspects which are closely connected to reading poetry and short stories. I you were to look for all these aspects in a novel or longer prose text, you would probably die…
I will in the next post try shortly to address the use of new criticism when reading longer prose texts.
First of all. If it is a shorter text, a poem or such, or a real study of a text, then read it several times. Even try to find different narrations of the text: just read it slowly, read it out loud, have it read out loud. Basically get comfortably with the text, the style etc.
Secondly: Close reading means that you should be open to the text; open with feeling, experiences and knowledge, BUT it must be the text which regulates which of these preconditions is set into use. The rule is that we own the author the chance to get his say before we use his text in a personal context.
Also remember that the title is the first thing which we see of a text, but try to keep in mind that it often is the last thing the author gives the text; therefore try to start the interpretation in the first paragraph (this is not new criticism as such, just a common sense approach to the text!)
Now lets get to the text:
1: The graphical layer
- Look at the layout (some poems use layouts to add meaning. Visual pivoting points etc.)
- Paragraph/stanza lengths, visual effects, capitalization etc.
2: The sound layer
- Rhyme, rhythm, vowel sounds etc.
- Pace of the text: does it try to slow you down, or pick up your pace. This can be through the length of words, sentences, paragraphs or whole chapters.
3: Units of meaning
- Syntax (choice of words), symbolic names, themes, motifs or topics.
- Try to organise the words or names different ‘fields’. This helps to create coherence between parts.
4: The syntactical layer
- Analytical, synthetic usage of language, active/passive sentence constructions
- Word classes and how they are used
- Clauses – active/passive
5: The structural layer
- Metaphors
- Symbolic text
6: Large units
- Time
- Place
- Characters and plot
- Milieu
- Presented problems/ideas
- Composition
7: The narrator
- Who is telling the story (not the one who have written the story).
- Credibility
- The narrator opinions towards ideas, characters etc. (use of irony, pathos etc.)
Okay – now what is the text trying to tell us? What is the meaning?
I know that these points are all taking place at the same time when reading, here they are split up to create a general view.
Remember that you do not have to write a whole lot to do all this, you just have to give yourself time while reading. If this is all to complicated, notes are always a good help.