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Title: Formalism New Criticism


1
Formalism (New Criticism)
  • Some More Love Poems and Stories

2
Central Questions
  • Can anything human transcend time and space (be
    eternal and universal) for you? (Love,
    masterpieces, maternal love, friendship,
    humanity?)
  • Are we ultimately free? Is our subjectivity
    unified or fragmentary?
  • What is culture/literature? How is it related to
    our daily life? Can we resist commercial culture
    through cultivating our artistic sensibility?
    Do you feel nostalgic about a certain historical
    period?
  • What are the values in reading literature? Is it
    the finest example of culture?
  • How do we read a poem/text? What do we look for?
    The authors ideas? How they reflect his/her
    life or the social-historical movements? How we
    feel about it? The meanings conveyed through
    both form and content? Or the ways a text
    responds to its time consciously or unconsciously?

Liberal Humanism
Traditional Approaches
3
Outline
Literature as a profession a Religion and the
only solution to worldly chaos.
  • New Criticism Key Words
  • Theoretic Basis
  • Matthew Arnold Culture vs. Anarchy
  • Organic Whole (T. S. Eliot) Objective
    Correlative
  • New Criticism major assumptions methods
  • Romantic story and Victorian love poems in the
    context
  • of the Victorian vs.
  • Modern Views of Love
  • Reference and Assignments

from idealism repression to disunity and
franker views of the body and desire)
4
Key Words
  • New Criticism defined 33
  • Ideals of New Criticism
  • Autonomy (34) Liberal Humanism
  • Organic unity 33
  • Component (1) Objective Correlative (Eliot)
    (chap 2 33)
  • Component (2) Paradox, irony, ambiguity and
    tension
  • Against
  • Intentional Fallacy
  • Affective Fallacy
  • Heresy of Paraphrase (New Critics) (40)
  • See also p. 43

5
Theoretical Basis (1)M. Arnold Culture vs.
Anarchy
  • Culture
  • the best that has been thought and said
    universal and timeless
  • Involves intellectual refinement and sensibility,
    disinterested pursuit of goodness, spiritual
    activity
  • e.g. Hellenism Greek culture
  • e.g. Poetryinterpreter of life
  • Anarchy caused by capitalism and middle-class
    Protestantism.
  • Philistinism self-centered, materialistic
  • note Philistine--(?)??????????,????

Bertens 2-5
6
Arnold (2) Arts Timelessness Liberal Humanism
  • The ultimate autonomy and self-sufficiency of
    the subject (Bertens 6) ? we are essentially
    free.
  • Likewise, literature, or its universal values, is
    not constrained by its time and space.
  • Still relevant today
  • e.g. Isnt it true that many of us, at least at
    some point in our life, want to see literature as
    a high-minded enterprise by and for sensitive and
    fine-tuned intellectuals that is somehow several
    steps removed from the trivial push and pull or
    ordinary life?
  • ???????
  • We choose to be who we are today and we will be
    responsible for it.

7
Theoretical Basis (2)Textual Autonomy Organic
Unity
  • the poets mind as a catalyst (??)

Experience
CO2???? ????
objective correlatives (33)
Organic whole
8
New Criticism Major Assumption (2) organic
wholeness
  • organic unity (33)
  • all of its elements (form and content, poetic
    elements, tensions) form a single unified
    effect.
  • all parts of a poem are interrelated and
    interconnected, with each part reflecting and
    helping to support the poem's central idea.
    ...allows for the harmonization of conflicting
    ideas, feelings, and attitudes, ...

9
objective correlative ????? (T.S. Eliot)
  • An external object used to convey the writers
    feeling, which is elevated to a universal level
    in writing so that the same feelings can be
    evoked in the reader.
  • The only way of expressing emotion in the form
    of art is by finding an objective correlative
    in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a
    chain of events which shall be the formula of
    that particular emotion such that when the
    external facts, which must terminate in sensory
    experience, are given, the emotion is immediately
    evoked. (Hamlet and His Problems)

10
objective correlative e.g. ????? (T.S. Eliot)
  • e.g. Images of coldness in Hardys Neutral
    Tones
  • e.g. . . . the sun was white, as though chidden
    of God
  • The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
  • Let us go then, you and I,
  • When the evening is spread out against the sky
  • Like a patient etherized(????) upon a table
  • In a Station of the Metro 
  • THE apparition of these faces in the crowd 
  • Petals on a wet, black bough.  
  • (? Are they objective or subjective?)

11
T. S. Eliot his Value Judgment
  • dislikes PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY and Tennysontoo
    emotional for him.
  • e.g. Oh, lift me as a wave, a leaf, a cloud!
  • I fall upon the thorns of life! I bleed! (ODE TO
    THE WEST WIND )
  • Favors metaphysical poetry, which unites
    emotions and wits.
  • What comes after 17th century poetry is a
    dissociation of sensibility. ? finds organic
    unity in literature

12
New Criticism Major Assumptions (Bertens
21-23 )
  • A poem is an autonomy (????), its meanings
    decided by itself alone, but not by the authors
    intention or the readers emotional responses to
    it.
  • Intentional Fallacy
    (???? 40),
  • Affective Fallacy (????)
  • Poetry offers a different kind of truth (poetic
    truth) than science, conveyed through its dense
    language which cannot be translated.
  • Heresy of Paraphrase

13
New Criticism Methodology
  • New Criticisms synonyms
  • objective criticism, practical criticism,
    textual criticism, close reading
  • the "text and the text alone" approach

14
New Criticism on Poetry (chap 2 34-42 Bressler
44 - 45)
  • Pay close attention to the texts diction its
    meanings (connotation and denotation) and even
    its etymological roots.
  • a. Its figurative language ????(?????????????)
  • 2. Study its form or pattern e.g.
  • Traditional or free or open form
  • Sound pattern (prosody??) Image Pattern,
    Symbolic structure, elaborate conceit p. 39
  • structure and patterns e.g. oppositions in the
    text (paradox, ambiguity, irony p. 39)
  • 3. In other words, do a close reading of all the
    poetic/narrative elements and try to find out it
    unifying meaning (from Parts to an Organic
    Wholeness) ref. questions on pp. 35, 37

15
New Criticism Methodology (1) Poetry
Whole Themes Pattern tension ambiguities,
paradox,
contradictions
  • Parts
  • Diction (Denotations,
  • connotations
  • etymological roots)
  • Allusions
  • Prosody
  • Relationships
  • among
  • the various elements

16
New Criticism Methodology (1) Narrative
Whole Themes pattern, tension, ambiguities,
paradox, contradictions
  • Parts
  • Point of view,
  • dialogue,
  • setting,
  • Plot
  • Characterization
  • Relationships
  • among
  • the various elements

17
Romantic/Victorian love storiesin the context
of the Victorian vs. Modern Views of Love
  • The Trial of Love
  • Mary Shelley
  • Sonnets 26 and 43
  • EBB her Life and her Marriage
  • Paintings female and male desire and end of
    love

18
The Trial of LoveQuestions (1)
  • How do you divide the story into the beginning,
    middle and end? And where are the turning
    points?
  • What do you think about the story and the
    different moments of choice? the choices
  • of love by Angeline and Ippolito
  • of the vow of silence and separation for one year

  • of love for Faustina (As)
  • of not breaking the vow when meeting the lover
  • of writing the letter for Faustina (As)
  • of expressing his love for Faustina (Fs)
  • of believing that love is sacred and immutable.

19
The Trial of LovePlot and Turning Points
  • Beginning background section (1) A leaves the
    convent to go see F(of As love for Faustina) ?
    two possibilities for a near future? flashback (
    of love between Angeline and Ippolito of the vow
    of silence and separation for one year) ? section
    (2) A goes back to the convent, meeting I on the
    road (of not breaking the vow when meeting the
    lover)
  • Middle section (3) F goes to visit A and goes
    back with A ? section (4) frightened by a
    buffalo, rescued by I ?I injured Fs story (of
    being rescued by her cavalier) As action and
    repression (p. 16)? section (5) I recovers and
    join F in the saloon, A refrains from visiting
    them ? section (6) Fs invitation becomes more
    urgent ? A. feel uncertain ? visits the villa
    without seeing I? writing the letter for
    Faustina
  • Climax and Denouement/Ending section (7) A goes
    to the villa to find F with the letter ( I
    arranges his marriage with Faustina) ? retreat in
    shock? letter about how I receives the letter ?
    section (8) the unhappy couple and A believes
    that love is sacred and immutable.

20
The Trial of LoveQuestions for Pattern
  • Character Relationship
  • How is Angeline contrasted with Faustina in their
    personalities and backgrounds? How about
    Ippolito? (e.g. 12, pp. 15-16)
  • In what ways is Angeline a typical 19th century
    angel? Is she just an angel? What role does
    she take?
  • Structure and Plot
  • Where do you start to see ironies?
  • After the turning point arent the characters
    weaving stories (or lies) about their experience?
    Whose stories follow the pattern (or ideologies)
    of Romantic love?
  • Language
  • As a 19th-century story, the descriptions of
    personal emotions are mostly external (that of
    eyes, lips, etc.) Do you find any images
    typically Romantic? (e.g. 10)

21
Trial of Love Manifold Ironies
  • Thesis The story presents Romantic but
    inconstant love ironically, while the final irony
    is on the heroine (or the author) who still
    believes in loves eternity.
  • Romantic love criticized
  • -- Faustinas egotism and her stereotypical
    story 15, 16.
  • -- A also has her romantic idea (16)
  • -- All rush into love only the man gets a chance
    to be inconstant, and the woman gets a cavalier
    servant (22).
  • B. Situational ironies who is blind?
  • For A, it is F e.g. 16, 18.
  • For us, it is A, who does not see the twos
    relationship develop (e.g. p. 11, 15,16, 17,
    1921!)

22
Trial of Love Ironies on Angeline
  • A typical self-sacrificing angel who represses
    herself unsuccessfully and could not always
    sacrifice herself
  • takes the role of a mother (to replace her
    mother)
  • thinks she writes the letter for F, but actually
    for herself (19)
  • Despite her repression, she cannot help having
    feelings and desire -- mixture of feelings (pp.
    13, when meeting I on the road) vent her grief
    onto Is father
  • cries on her way to the saloon keeping a false
    hope even when receiving the letter.

23
The Trial of Love in Context
  • A story less successful than Frankenstein?
  • Shelley contributed it to The Keepsake for 1835,
    after she becomes a widow neglected by her
    friends and Percy Shelley's relations, with a
    young son to feed, clothe, and house.
  • The Keepsake enormously popular with the buying
    public but just as widely reviled in precisely
    the literary circles to which Shelley by rights
    belonged
  • In practical terms, the Keepsake writer's
    assignment is to produce an interesting, compact
    narrative that provides some degree of
    intersection with the subject of the engraving,
    which was usually chosen by the editors before
    the tale had been commissioned.(O'Dea)

24
The Trial of Love in Context (2)
  • The engraving a light-haired woman points
    vaguely both to a letter on the floor and to
    the dark-haired woman a mans hat and cloak on
    the table.
  • The story Shelley fleshes out suggests the
    complexity of Angelines feelings.
  • The missing mother in Frankenstein as well as
    in this story.

25
EBBs sonnets Questions
  • What are the main ideas of Sonnet 26 and 43?
  • Are they good poems from the standard of New
    Criticism?
  • What do you think about EBBs modes of love?
  • Note sonnet forms
  • English (Shakespearean) sonnet Quartrain (abab
    cdcd efef) couplet (gg)
  • Italian (Petrarchan) Octave (abbaabba ) and
    Sestet (cdecde, cdccdc, or cdedce.)

26
Sonnet forms
  • Italian two parts -- "The octave bears the
    burden a doubt, a problem, a reflection, a
    query, an historical statement, a cry of
    indignation or desire, a Vision of the ideal. The
    sestet eases the load, resolves the problem or
    doubt, answers the query, solaces the yearning,
    realizes the vision.
  • English the final couplet -- a commentary on the
    foregoing, an epigrammatic close. (source
    http//www.english.upenn.edu/afilreis/88/sonnet.h
    tml )

27
Sonnet 26
  • I lived with visions for my company
  • Instead of men and women, years ago,
  • And found them gentle mates, nor thought to know
  • A sweeter music than they played to me.
  • But soon their trailing purple was not free
  • Of this world's dust, their lutes did silent
    grow,
  • And I myself grew faint and blind below
  • Their vanishing eyes. Then THOU didst cometo
    be,
  • Beloved, what they seemed. Their shining fronts,
  • Their songs, their splendors (better, yet the
    same,
  • As river-water hallowed into fonts??? ),
  • Met in thee, and from out thee overcame
  • My soul with satisfaction of all wants
  • Because God's gifts put man's best dreams to
    shame.

28
Sonnet 26 More Questions
  • What pattern(s) can you find from this sonnet?
  • Is it an Italian sonnet or Shakespearean sonnet?
    How does the sonnet form help convey the idea?
    (Where do you find the break?)
  • What about the other poetic techniques such as
    the use of metaphor, repetition (thee) and
    punctuation?
  • How about the ending what does man mean? Is
    this line ironic or paradoxical?

29
Sonnet 26 (1)
  • Thesis 1. The speaker expresses the great
    changes that happen to her after the lover
    comes to her through the arrangement of sounds
    and 8-6 Italian sonnet structure.
  • Form
  • two part (before-after) structure broken by
    THOUs arrival in the middle of line 8.
  • Nasal sounds associated with visions, and
    explosives with the lover.
  • Content
  • Personification visions as they
  • Vision and Dreams cannot compare with Gods
    giftyou (closer than they).
  • Ambiguities wants, Gods gifts what
    overcame her with satisfaction?

30
Sonnet 26 (2)
  • Mens dream males dream of domination or male
    version of love
  • thou or what overcame her with satisfaction
    sexual pleasure, imagined in the past as visions
    and songs river-water hallowed into fonts
  • wants female desire for sex or
    self-fulfillment
  • Gods gift females own body.

31
Sonnet 43
???????????
  • How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.
  • I love thee to the depth and breadth and height
  • My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight
  • For the ends of Being and ideal Grace.
  • I love thee to the level of everyday's
  • Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light.
  • I love thee freely, as men strive for Right
  • I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise.
  • I love thee with the passion put to use
  • In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith.
  • I love thee with a love I seemed to lose
  • With my lost saints,I love thee with the
    breath,
  • Smiles, tears, of all my life!and, if God
    choose,
  • I shall but love thee better after death.

???? ?????
32
Sonnet 43
  • Thesis The speaker expresses both through form
    and content how love is both boundless and
    limited.
  • Form
  • Italian, but with only 4 rhymes intertwining
    rhymes
  • Repetition of words
  • Emotional, long lines not limited by the form
    breaks in the middle of two lines
  • Meaning in tension
  • Paradox between uncountable love and countable
    ways
  • between boundless love and finality of life.
    (freely, purely vs. loss and death)
  • between the spiritual and eternal (open or long
    vowels) and the everyday life (short and stressed
    syllables).

33
Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1) A Distinguished
Poet
  • A comfortable childhood, when she preferred
    reading to social life.
  • Very well-read, mostly self-educated.
  • Writes her first poem at the age of four
  • At the age of six, she received from her father
    for "some lines on virtue penned with great care"
    a ten-shilling note enclosed in a letter
    addressed to "the Poet-Laureate of Hope End."
  • In 1850, the year when Wordsworth died, she was
    mentioned frequently as a possible successor of
    the Poet Laureate.

34
E. B. Browning (2) the Conventional and
Unconventional
  • The plot of Romantic Love
  • The father did not allow them to get married
    (being against the idea of marriage). (Why? )
  • Threatened with lung disease, lived in a darkened
    room with few visitors (after her brothers death
    by drowning).
  • Browning in January 1845 wrote a letter which
    began, "I love your verses with all my heart,
    dear Miss Barrett."
  • Married before elopement. (still following the
    Victorian moral codes)
  • Her elopement with Browning cured her
    invalidism.
  • More famous and accomplished than Browning during
    her lifetime
  • they lived on her money RB becomes productive
    after her death
  • Reasons for the fathers objection mixture of
    blood

35
E. B. Browning (3) Critical Reception of EBB as
a poet
  • While Robert Browning is famous for being a
    poet, Elizabeth Barrett Browning is famous for
    being a poet with a romantic life story (Beard
    67)
  • Contemporary feminists readings
  • Aurara Leigh Aurora, who aspires to be a poet,
    is courted with a marriage proposal by her cousin
    Romney. Rejecting his offer she proclaims her own
    vocation'. -- a feminist version
  • Sonnets ideas of writing love poems appeared in
    her notebooks well before she met RB.
  • Victorians saw her as a major poet, good enough
    to be considered for laureatship
  • Great inspiration for Emily Dickinson and
    Christina Rossetti
  • Later critics see her as an adjunct to her
    husband

36
Her sonnets
  • Different from the Renaissance sonnets because
    she talks mostly about her own love (and
    doubtspossibly including the sexual aspects),
    but not her lover.

37
E. B. Browning (3) love desire

  • Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850)
  • The physical sources of desire is presented with
    metaphors (Kern 91-92)
  • She hears footsteps of the soul and waits with
    trembling knees.
  • The hand of love is soft and warm and brings
    souls to touch
  • Her heart opens wide to fold within the wet
    wings of thy dove
  • Her own pulse and her beloveds beat double

38
E. B. Browning (3) desire

  • Exchange of a lock of hair
  • R. Browning Give me . . . so much of youall
    precious that you areas may be given in a lock
    of your hairI will live and die with it.
  • Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850)
  • . . .from my poets forehead to my heart . . .
  • I lay the gift where nothing hindereth
  • Here on my heart, as on thy brow, to lack
  • No natural heat till mine grows cold in
    death.(Sonnet 19 qtd Kern 345)

39
A Broader Context
  • Victorian and Modern Views of Love Some More
    Examples

40
Female Desire
  • Nude With a Dog 1861-61 (later dated 1868)
  • Gustave Courbet

Innocence, implied sexuality
41
Female Desire
Egon Schiele (Austria 1890 - 1918)

KNEELING NUDE, 1918 http//www.donagrafik.com/WUK
_KATALOG/HTML/31_e.html
Nu a la pantoufle a carreaux (1917 Naked with the
slipper with squares) http//www.pyb.com.au/ptcds/
pcres/focus/schiele.htm
42
Male Desire
Jean-Leon Gerome (1824-1904) (French) "Phryne
before the Areopagus 1861 http//www.kingsgaller
ies.com/1024x768/galleries/gerome/expanded/picture
-12.htm
43
Male Desire

S. Dali The Great Masturbator 1929
44
Male Desire
  • (For your reference) The Great Masturbator --
    The main subject in it is a large, soft,
    terrorized head, livid and waxlike, with pink
    cheeks the closed eyes are embellished by very
    long eyelashes. A tremendous nose is leaning on
    the ground. The mouth, replaced by a decaying
    grasshopper crawling with ants, opens in the
    middle of a head finished off with ornamentation
    in the 1900 style.
  • Fantasy of a woman stronger and dominatingfear
    of castration? (source)

S. Dali The Great Masturbator 1929
45
Victorian Views Ending in conflict
  • While the Victorian were acutely aware of
    conflict, they were less willing than the moderns
    to see it as intrinsic to love or as having a
    constitutive function. In art they displaced
    conflict onto fictitious characters, often onto
    femme fatales in distant, ancient, or imaginary
    places. (Kern 373)
  • The other solution joining in death. (sometimes
    quite literally e.g. Wuthering Heights Dante
    Gabriel Rossettis poems)

46
V. Ending
The lovers composed, with reasons (the book)
clearly given.
  • Arthur Hughes (1832-1915) Aurora Leigh's
    Dismissal of Romney- (The Tryst) 1860
    http//freespace.virgin.net/k.peart/Victorian/hugh
    eslove.htm

47
M. Ending

Edward Munch Ashes (1894)
Both lovers frustrated, in a mess.
48
Reference
  • Literary Theory The Basics. Hans Bertens. NY
    Routledge, 2001.
  • Literary Criticism An Introduction to Theory and
    Practice. 2nd Ed. (Bressler, Charles E.
    Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey Prentice Hall,
    1999.)
  • TEXTS AND CONTEXTS - INTRODUCING LITERATURE AND
    LANGUAGE STUDY. Adrian Beard. Routledge, 2001.
  • The Culture of Love Victorians to Moderns.
    Stephen Kern. Harvard UP, 1992.
  • Gregory O'Dea. "'Perhaps a Tale You'll Make It'
    Mary Shelley's Tales for The Keepsake.
    Iconoclastic Departures Mary Shelley after" In
    Frankenstein, edited by Syndy M. Conger,
    Frederick S. Frank, and Gregory O'Dea. Teaneck,
    N.J. Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 1997
    62-78.

49
Readings for next week
  • Psychoanalytic Criticism chap 3 to p. 53
  • "Eveline" by James Joyce
  • Review of Araby if you have read it before.
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