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Critical Analysis of Fiction

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Title: Critical Analysis of Fiction


1
Critical Analysis of Fiction
  • An Explanation and Example

2
Critical Analysis of Fiction
  • For Paper 2, you did a literary analysis. You
    fitted a story into a literary movement, and
    discussed how the characteristics of that
    movement were important to the individual story
    you were writing about.
  • While the literary analysis you wrote for Paper 2
    involved the same basic process that you will use
    to write your critical analysis for Paper 4, a
    critical analysis is much more involved.
  • Rather than looking outside the story, and
    talking about how certain features of the story
    you have chosen match those of other stories (as
    in Paper 2), for Paper 4, you will look intensely
    at how a single story is put together.
  • You should focus on one or two of the tools that
    the author has used to make meaning in the story
    (for example theme, setting, imagery, irony,
    symbolism, etc.) and discuss how that single tool
    (or those two tools) is/are important to the
    entire work of fiction.

3
An Explanation of the Assignment
  • For Paper 4, you may use the same short story
    that you used for Paper 2. Or you may choose a
    new story from the works contained in pages
    619-808 of the Norton Anthology.
  • You will follow the same procedure for writing
    and submitting the Formal Outline for Paper 4,
    and Paper 4 itself, that you used in Unit 6 to
    write and submit the Formal Outline for Paper 2,
    and Paper 2.
  • The only real difference here is that you will be
    writing a longer, more thoroughly researched
    paper that deals with the internal workings of
    the story you select, rather than fitting that
    story into a literary movement.
  • Since you have been shown the six steps in the
    previous Unit, I will not go back through all
    those steps in this presentation. I will simply
    give you the end product, the actual essay.
  • This essay is longer than the one you have to
    write, but it does precisely the same thing. You
    do not need to read the target story that this
    essay analyzes. Instead, you should carefully
    read the sample and pay attention to how it is
    put together. Your essay should be set up
    exactly like the sample.

4
The Six Steps
  • In Unit 6, you were given the six steps to doing
    a critical analysis. You should follow those
    same steps in doing your critical analysis for
    Unit 8.
  • To begin, you should complete the first three
    steps
  • Step 1 Reread the short story
  • Step 2 Annotate the short story
  • Step 3 Make a formal outline
  • Then, once have submittedand had returned marked
    acceptedthe Formal Outline for Paper 4, you
    should complete the next three steps
  • Step 4 Select quotations
  • Step 5 Expand the formal outline into a critical
    analysis using Formal MLA Style
  • Step 6 Do a Works Cited page

5
The Sample Essay
  • The story I will use for this sample Paper 4 is
    Hacienda, by Katherine Anne Porter. Much of
    this story takes place on a train ride across
    Mexico. In the essay that follows, I discuss how
    the train itself, and its passengers, are used by
    Porter to comment on her opinion of the failure
    of the Mexican Revolution to bring meaningful
    change to Mexico.
  • Katherine Anne Porter was a 20th Century American
    writer. She was born in Indian Creek, Texas, in
    1890. She died in 1980. She lived in the USA,
    Mexico, and Europe.
  • Porter spent a good deal of time in Mexico, an
    experience she used in writing many of her best
    stories (like Maria Concepcion and Flowering
    Judas).
  • Porters books include collections of short
    stories (Flowering Judas, etc.) and a novel (Ship
    of Fools).
  • However, although her novel was critically
    acclaimed, it is for her short fiction that
    Porter has received the most recognition.

6
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • A Failed Revolution on Wheels The Train as a
    Microcosm of Mexico in Katherine Anne Porters
    Hacienda
  • On 14 June 1965, Katherine Anne Porter wrote a
    preface entitled Go Little Book for her
    collected short stories, in which she calls
    Mexico her much-loved second country (v). It
    must therefore have been extremely difficult for
    Porter, who had known and written about Mexico
    since the 1920s, to witness first-hand the
    appalling shortcomings of the much-ballyhooed
    Mexican Revolution. In Hacienda, Porter uses a
    combination of symbolism and irony to take to
    task those whom she holds responsible for the
    failure of the Mexican Revolution to follow
    through on its glowing promises to the Mexican
    people. Porter makes it clear, through careful
    use of these two powerful literary tools, that
    for her no social or political group can escape
    its share of blame for the state of affairs in
    post-revolutionary Mexico. The rich, the middle
    class, and the poor the Right and the Left the
    artists, and even art itself are held accountable
    for the lack of real progress despite the toll
    the Revolution took on the people of Mexico.

7
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • Porter begins the story by using symbolism and
    irony to chastise the rich, the middle class, and
    the poor of Mexico for their respective roles in
    bringing about the current dismal state of
    affairs in the country. Hacienda opens with
    criticism of the Revolution itself, when Porter
    has her first-person narrator observe with biting
    irony in the first paragraph that Now that the
    true revolution of blessed memory has come and
    gone in Mexico, the names of many things are
    changed, nearly always with the view to an
    appearance of heightened well-being for all
    creatures (135). Indeed, appearancesor at
    best, mere triflesseem to be the only concern of
    the people on the train. Porter levels the bulk
    of her irony at the rich. The members of the
    upper class, embodied by Kennerly, view the poor
    with the same contempt with which they have
    always regarded the lower class. After
    complaining at length about the smell of the
    second-class passengers and their belongings,
    Kennerly leads the narrator and Andreyev into the
    first-class coach and proceeds to build a nest
    in which they might curl up facing each other,
    temporarily secure from the appalling situation
    of being three quite superior persons of the
    intellectual caste of the ruling race at large
    and practically defenseless in what a country!

8
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • (136). Although Kennerly is an American, his
    attitudes are identical to those of the native
    ruling class, as is shown later in the story when
    the little party reaches the hacienda on the
    pulque plantation, and Kennerlys views are
    echoed by doña Julia and don Genaro. Indeed,
    Kennerlys nest and don Genaros hacienda perform
    the same function they insulate the superior
    rich from contact with the inferior and degraded
    poor. Porter employs this same type of nesting
    symbolism to criticize the middle class, whom she
    portrays as being envious of the wealth and
    isolation of the rich. Immediately following her
    statement about the use of Pullman cars by the
    very rich when traveling on Mexican trains,
    Porter has the narrator observe that the
    compliment a middle class Mexican always utters,
    when he wishes truly to praise anything, is
    that it is as beautiful as a pulman! (135).
    The word anything makes it clear that the
    symbol of the Pullman applies to attitude of
    middle class citizens toward the whole of
    society, as well as to their notion of ideal
    railroad travel. The fact that the author never
    once mentions the middle class again strongly
    implies that, for Porter, there is nothing more
    to be said for the middle class in Mexico than
    that they would give anything to become like the
    rich.

9
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • While the author is less savagely ironic when
    it comes to her portrayal of the poor, the
    economically disadvantaged are still taken to
    task. Porter depicts the denizens of the
    second-class car as having settled for mere
    surface conveniences, rather than holding out for
    real social change after the revolution. She
    makes clear her belief that the poor have been
    bought off all too cheaply by those in power. As
    the narrator observes with gentle and yet telling
    irony, Almost nothing can disturb the poor
    peoples quiet ecstasy when they are finally
    settled among their plunder, and the engine,
    mysteriously and powerfully animated, draws them
    lightly over the miles they have so often counted
    step by step (136). Porters use of the word
    plunder strongly implies a connection to the
    Mexican Revolution, whose leaders she later
    portrays as plunderers who have not shared their
    wealth with the common man. That the narrators
    observation regarding the poor people on the
    train is meant to include the entire country is
    shown later on when Porter recounts the story of
    an old Spanish gentleman who, having revisited
    the hacienda after an absence of fifty years,
    says that Nothing has changed (142). At
    least in Porters eyes, nothing has changed that
    really matters.

10
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • In addition to her social criticism, Porter
    also uses symbolism and irony to engage in
    political criticism of post-revolutionary Mexico.
    She chastises both the Right and the Left for
    their joint failure to bring real unity to the
    Mexican people. Like the first-class and
    second-class cars that divide the passengers on
    the train, the country is split between the twin
    poles of the Left and the Right. Porter uses the
    character of Kennerly to personify all the
    negative qualities of the rich and powerful
    conservatives on both sides of the border. His
    main concern in life is making money. The irony
    Porter directs against the Right, as embodied in
    the person of Kennerly, is savage. Kennerlys
    first comment, upon hearing that Justino has
    killed his sister is, On the set? My God! We
    are ruined! (147). When he hears that Justino
    has been jailed, Kennerlys response is that
    This is going to hold up everything, and that
    it just means more time wasted (148). The
    fact that the greatest profits are to be gained
    by graft, and by denying basic human rights to
    the poor, is not lost on Kennerlywho, like don
    Genaro, lives in a world of big money, nepotism,
    and insider connections. By linking the

11
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • negative characteristics of Kennerly and don
    Genaro, Porter is able to extend her criticism of
    conservative values throughout most of North
    America. Don Genaro, the sole inevitable heir
    (153), has inherited the pulque plantation from
    his grandfather Kennerly owes his chance to make
    big money on the film to his brother-in-law, who
    raised most of the money among his friends for
    the expedition (141). That Porter means to
    equate the conservative practices of Kennerly
    with those of don Genarowho treats the workers
    on his plantation as virtual slaves, and who does
    not believe that Justinos life is worth two
    thousand pesosis shown by the similar way in
    which she employs irony to skewer both men, and
    by the fact that they share a car to the capital
    at the end of the story, on errands that are
    either illegal, immoral, or both.
  • Porter also uses symbolism in her critique of
    Mexican liberals. As Jane Krause DeMouy has
    written of Porters use of symbols, students of
    Porter would do well to remember the Jamesian
    principle that art is selection. When Porter,
    like other artists, chooses certain subjects, she
    is not only shaping an entity but saying what she
    considers important, so it is essential to know
    what

12
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • she is writing about (par. 2). It is entirely
    fitting that since Porter uses an American to
    symbolize the shortcomings of the conservatives
    in Mexico, she uses a Russian to symbolize the
    failings of Mexican liberals. The weaknesses of
    the Left are embodied by Andreyev. First and
    foremost, Porter paints Andreyev as a hypocrite.
    Although he casts a lot of disapproving glances
    at Kennerly in response to the latters bigoted
    commentary, Andreyev allows Kennerly to pay his
    way on the train. And it is not just Andreyevs
    train ticket that Kennerly pays for. As Andreyev
    says flatly to the narrator, We none of us
    should throw away our money when Kennerly is so
    rich and charitable (137). The irony here cuts
    both ways. While Andreyev is obviously poking
    fun at the idea of Kennerly being charitable, the
    fact that he is taking Kennerlys money remains.
    Porter turns Andreyevs own irony against him,
    leaving the reader with the clear impression that
    the party on the Left in Mexico has been bought
    and paid for by party on the Right. The fact
    that Andreyev sits in a first-class coach with
    Kennerly, rather than in a second-class car with
    the common people, is a symbolic indictment in
    itself. Porters

13
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • belief that the Left in Mexicolike the
    government installed by the revolutionhas
    separated itself from the common people is shown
    by her portrayal of Betancourt. Like Andreyev in
    his first-class coach on the train, the
    Mexican-born Betancourt lives in luxury in don
    Genaros hacienda, rather than among the
    impoverished workers. Porter describes
    Betancourt as being completely at the mercy of
    an ideal of elegance and detachment perpetually
    at war with a kind of Mexican nationalism which
    afflicted him like an inherited weakness of the
    nervous system (152). In addition to its
    hypocrisy, the liberal intelligentsia is shown as
    being preoccupied with other things than the
    welfare of the Mexican people.
  • Finally, Porter uses symbolism and irony to
    point out the failure of the artists, and even of
    art itself, to improve the lives of the common
    people of Mexico. While the wealthy are shown as
    being consumed merely with making and spending
    money, the artistsmembers of the liberal
    intelligentsia, again personified by Andreyevare
    portrayed as being consumed merely with making
    art. All too often, as is the case with the film
    that the Russians and

14
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • Kennerly are making together, this art takes the
    form of empty propaganda which is useless to the
    exploited and disenfranchised poor. Porter makes
    this clear by employing the symbol of Andreyevs
    pictures. Rather than taking some kind of action
    to help the downtrodden Indians whose plight he
    is filming, Andreyev takes pictures. Porter
    levels bitter irony at Andreyevand by extension,
    Mexican artists as wellby having him say to the
    narrator, after showing her photographs of
    Indians with closed dark facesfull of
    instinctive sufferingwomen kneeling at washing
    stones, their blouses slipping from their
    shoulders, that the Indians are so
    picturesquewe shall be accused of dressing them
    up (142). Even art itself does not escape
    blame. Like the artists who make it, Mexican art
    has done nothing to alleviate the suffering of
    the Mexican poor. Indeed, in the case of the
    film, it has actually caused suffering. Justino
    shoots his sister with a pistol that is being
    used as a prop in the film. If not for the film,
    she would still be alive. At its best, art is
    ineffectual. Art, like the artists who make it,
    proves in the end to be merely another passenger
    on the train of the Mexican statelooking out of
    first-class windows at people in need and taking
    pictures.

15
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • Porters story, with all its beautiful
    symbolism and its deft use of irony, shows that
    art is powerless against the status quo, both on
    the train and in the country at large. Indeed,
    although Porter depicted Mexico in a positive
    light in her earliest stories, in her more mature
    work, she depicts Mexico as a place of hopeless
    oppression for the native peoples (Porter,
    Katherine Anne 1890-1980). This is certainly
    the case in Hacienda. The narrators ironic
    observations about the rich, the middle class,
    and the poor about the Right and the Left and
    about the artists and even art itself cannot
    change the attitudes of those it seeks to
    chastise. And mere words cannot feed the hungry
    people of Mexico. In the end, the plight of
    Porters beloved country puts her narrator to
    flight. Literally, all she can do is flee. The
    last words in the story, ironically, are spoken
    by the Indian driver, looking forward to a time
    when the green corn will be ready, and ah, there
    will be enough to eat again (170).

16
The Sample Essay, cont.
  • Works Cited
  • DeMouy, Jane Krause. Katherine Anne Porter
    (1890-1980). Houghton MifflinCollege Division.
    2003. (29 July 2003) lish/heath/syllabuild/iguide/porter.html.
  • Porter, Katherine Anne 1890-1980. Books and
    Writers. 2000. (29 July 2003)
    .
  • Porter, Katherine Anne. Go Little Book The
    Collected Stories of Katherine Anne Porter. New
    York Harcourt Brace Company, 1979. v-vi.
  • Porter, Katherine Anne. Hacienda. The
    Collected Stories of Katherine Anne Porter. New
    York Harcourt Brace Company, 1979. 135-170.
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