INTRODUCING LITERATURE

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INTRODUCING LITERATURE A Practical Guide to Literary Analysis, Criticism, and Theory Brian Moon

First published in Australia 2016 Chalkface Press P/L PO Box 23 Cottesloe WA 6011 AUSTRALIA www.chalkface.net.au Brian Moon [text] and Chalkface Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owners. For authorised copying please ensure that your institution has a licence from the relevant Copyright Licensing Agency. This allows you to copy small parts of the text in limited numbers only. This, however, does not include quoted extracts: permission to copy extracts should be sought from individual copyright holders. Edited by Bronwyn Mellor National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry: Creator: Moon, Brian, 1958 author. Title: Introducing literature : a practical guide to literary analysis, criticism, and theory / Brian Moon (author) ; Bronwyn Mellor (editor) ; Stephen Mellor (designer). ISBN: 9781875136353 (paperback) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Target audience: For Secondary school age. Subjects: English literature Study and teaching (Secondary) English literature History and criticism Theory, etc. English language Rhetoric Study and teaching (Secondary) Writing Study and teaching (Secondary) Creative writing. Other Creators/Contributors: Mellor, Bronwyn, editor. Mellor, Stephen, book designer. Dewey Number: 820.712 Printed in Western Australia by PK Print P/L Hamilton Hill WA 6163 Paper specifications: see page 217.

Contents 1. Getting started 1 Learn what to expect in a literature course. Study your first challenging text. Plan ahead by setting up your notebooks and starting your personal library. What to expect when studying literature 2 An introduction to text study 4 Text study: The Miller by Geoffrey Chaucer 4 Exploring The Miller 5 Closer study: descriptions and comparisons 7 Layers of meaning: literal, connotative, figurative, symbolic 8 The text and its context 10 The challenges of literature study 13 The purpose: why am I doing this? 13 The complexity of literary texts 13 Knowledge gaps and intertextuality 13 The rules and methods of analysis 14 Overcoming the challenges 14 Strategies for success with literature 17 Building your personal library 17 Keeping a reading journal 19 Building a glossary of terms 20 Summary and terms to learn 21 2. What is literature? 22 Consider some definitions of literature and test them by exploring a poem. Learn some rules for judging works of literature. Write a short commentary on a literary text. Towards a definition of literature 23 Text study: In an Artist s Studio by Christina Rossetti 23 Exploring In an Artist s Studio 24 Finding the theme 25 The sonnet form 25 What makes In an Artist s Studio literature? 26 The purpose of writing 29 What is literature? 30 Literature as a type of text 30 Literature as quality and value 31 Literature as an industry 33 iv Introducing Literature

Making judgments about literature 37 Text study: thirteen mystery texts 38 Judging the mystery texts: type of text 40 Judging the mystery texts: purpose 40 Judging the mystery texts: quality and value 41 Five rules for judging quality 41 Writing a commentary 45 Summary and terms to learn 46 3. Why read literature? 47 Consider the arguments for and against literature study, and how they shape our approach to texts. Learn the history of important ideas about literature and its effects. Reflect on your own assumptions about reading literature. Reading literature: arguments for 48 Tangible benefits of literature 48 Intangible benefits of literature 49 Text study: Hamlet (extract) by William Shakespeare 50 Exploring Hamlet (I.v.1 42) 52 Why read Hamlet? 53 Reading literature: arguments against 54 Origins of arguments for and against literature 55 Plato: literature, lies, and illusions 55 Aristotle: literature, catharsis, and wisdom 58 Wordsworth: literature, pleasure, and harmony 61 Your view of literature: for or against? 63 Changing positions 64 Summary and terms to learn 68 4. Reading, responding and analysing 69 Learn about ways of reading and responding to literature. Study the communication model and learn about text and context. Practise your analytical and critical skills. Ways of responding to literature 69 Reading practices: personal, analytical, critical 71 Reading personally, analytically, critically 73 Text study: Pride and Prejudice (extract) by Jane Austen 73 Four key elements: reader, writer, text, and context 77 The communication model 77 A model of literary communication 78 Complications to the model: language change and context 79 Text and context 80 Text: reading the 'text itself' 80 Introducing Literature v

Context: reading around the text 82 Strategies for study 84 Notes and commentaries 84 Character profiles 86 Maps and literary tours 86 Charts and tables 87 Reading text and context 87 Text study: Wide Sargasso Sea (extract) by Jean Rhys 88 Summary and terms to learn 92 5. Studying texts in depth: poetry and prose 93 Apply your analytical skills in detail to two new texts. Complete guided studies of a poem and a short story. Learn the basic elements of a professional written response. Studying two texts in depth 94 Text study: Dover Beach by Matthew Arnold 94 Studying a poem: six steps to follow 97 Voices and perspective 103 Putting it all together 107 Comparing critical responses 109 Text study: Catapult by J.A. McLeod 111 Studying a story: eight steps to follow 115 A professional response 118 Comparing responses 120 Reviewing your analysis 121 Summary and terms to learn 124 6. The published response: writing an essay 125 Write a complete essay based on examples from professional critics. Learn to analyse essay questions. Learn the basics of referencing. Why write essays? 126 Professionals at work: reading published essays 126 Essay: Putting the Ham in Hamlet by Robert Browne 127 Essay: Complex Oscillations by Susan Hilton 128 Features of an essay 132 Outline for an essay 133 Planning an essay 134 Plan: Alice in Wonderland by Wendy Tiller 135 Essay: Alice in Wonderland by Wendy Tiller 136 Rating an essay 137 Planning and writing your essay 139 Building your essay plan 139 vi Introducing Literature

Plan template 140 Writing your essay 140 Essay template 141 Answering essay questions 142 Analysing the question 143 Key words to know 144 Referencing your sources 146 Summary and terms to learn 146 7. Creative responses: (re)writing literature 147 Improve your literary responses and writing skills at the same time. Learn how to create new texts based on your reading. Write a poem based on The Miller and a story based on Catapult. Writing as a response to literature 148 Imitation and originality 148 Project 1: Write a poem in heroic couplets 148 Building your character: features 149 Choosing descriptions and images 150 Controlling form and style 151 Putting it all together 153 Project 2: Write a short story based on a design 155 Building a scenario: character, plot, setting 155 Story substitutions 156 Describe your setting 157 Describe the main events 160 Putting it all together 160 Summary and terms to learn 162 8. Literary theory, issues, and ideologies 163 Explore some issues that complicate the study of literary texts. Learn about theories of literature and why they are important. Discover important topics for research and directions for study. Literature: preserving the culture? 164 Problems in criticism 164 Theory to the rescue? 166 Two views of literature 166 The conservative viewpoint: F.R. Leavis 167 The progressive viewpoint: Terry Eagleton 169 Literature and ideology 171 What is ideology? 171 Critical perspectives 172 History and change 173 Beyond the conservative and progressive divide 175 Introducing Literature vii

Twelve critical practices 176 Know your practice 179 Re-reading Catapult by J.A. McLeod 179 Unsolved problems and issues 182 A case study: Trigger warnings' 185 Summary and terms to learn 187 Resources: essential knowledge 188 Building your knowledge 188 Ten Greek myths and legends to know 189 Ten narrative schemas to know 191 Ten character archetypes to know 194 Ten literary sources to know 197 Ten Bible stories to know 200 A timeline of English literature 202 Sources 215 Permissions 216 Index 218 viii Introducing Literature

Preface In recent decades, the study of literature has increasingly been influenced by theory. In a relatively short span of time, a succession of movements New Criticism, structuralism, reader-response, Marxism, feminism, poststructuralism has transformed our ways of reading and responding to works of literature. For the most part, this has been a necessary and productive change. Literary theory has questioned and corrected a host of assumptions that once went unchallenged. Many of those assumptions about fixed and singular meanings, textual transparency, and literary aesthetics had become untenable in the face of a growing democratisation of education and increasing cultural diversity. Theory reminded us that the writing, publishing, circulation and certification of texts were not separable from the complex realities of class, gender, race, and education. The rise of theory has not been without cost, however. In some courses, reading of theory has displaced reading of literary works, with the result that students learn more about ways of reading while knowing fewer texts in detail. To paraphrase Terry Eagleton s famous quip about sensitivity, this risks students becoming more and more theoretically perceptive about nothing in particular. A second problem has been greater attention to high-level study at the expense of introductory courses that help students take their first steps in the informed reading, analysis, and enjoyment of literature. It is this second problem that Introducing Literature aims to address. Its goal is to lay the groundwork for higher-level, theorised approaches to literature by first introducing some basic rules and principles of literary study. The book is designed to support students who are entering their first formal courses in literary reading and textual analysis. It does this by setting out clearly and explicitly what kind of activity literature study is and then developing some basic skills for reading and responding. Designed to be studied in sequence, the chapters cover topics that teachers and students might need to address in an introductory course: how literature courses are structured, and what to expect why we read literature what kinds of writing count as literature, and why the rules for judging and interpreting literary works the types of knowledge and skills required for success the ways of responding to literature, including creative responses the issues and theories addressed in higher-level study. The framework for this study is largely rhetorical. This means that literary practice is viewed as an activity in which meanings emerge from the interplay between writer, reader, text, and context. This rhetorical framework aligns well with contemporary curricula, while also providing a foundation for future theoretical work. Practical exercises in literary reading and analysis are used throughout, to get students working purposefully with texts. Introducing Literature ix

The sample texts are largely drawn from the traditional English canon. This is a deliberate move designed to provide some valued historical and literary coordinates, and to equip students with some knowledge of influential and socially powerful texts. The aim is not to restore the canon and all its accompanying assumptions, but to recognise the historical fact that such texts continue to inform and influence the writing and reading of literature in English. The position taken by this book is that complete ignorance of the English tradition would be just as damaging as blind obedience to it. The broader perspective of the book is ultimately historical. It regards the production, circulation, and interpretation of literary works as a social practice one whose methods and values are constantly renegotiated in response to changing circumstances. It is hoped that this book, while introducing students to elements of literary practice, will also help teachers reflect on their own assumptions, and encourage debate of our purposes and goals in studying literature. Acknowledgements Thank you to Bronwyn Mellor for her scrupulous editorial attention to both the ideas and their expression; to Stephen Mellor for meticulous design work and management of the publication; and to both Bronwyn and Stephen for their much valued support and encouragement. Thank you to my colleague Barbara Harris, for her interest, advice and support. Thank you to John Richmond for his valuable contribution to the Resources chapter. Thank you also to those students who have in various ways prompted me to write; and to my colleagues and teachers over the years, whose knowledge and skill are but poorly reflected here. As always, thank you to my wife, Annette, whose advice, encouragement, and love are of the essence. Allan Watson Brian Moon About the author Brian Moon has taught English in Australian schools and Universities for more than 25 years. He has been a state examiner of English and has worked as a curriculum consultant and teacher educator. He is the author of many textbooks for English, including Studying Literature; Literary Terms: A Practical Glossary; Studying Poetry; Viewing Terms: A Practical Glossary for Film and TV Study; and Writing Projects, all from Chalkface Press. He holds a PhD in Communication and Cultural Studies and is currently an Associate Professor in the School of Education at Edith Cowan University in Perth, Western Australia. x Introducing Literature