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Genre and Kinds of Text

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Title: Genre and Kinds of Text


1
Genre and Kinds of Text
  • Canon and Classic

2
  • Genre-kinds, categories or types of cultural
    product and process--incluiding texts
  • word comes, through French, from Latin genera
    (pl) meanings kinds or types
  • love sonnets, absurdist drama, shopping lists,
    disaster movies
  • also genres of chats over coffee to job
    interviews, pizza packaging to shopping malls
  • broadest--looking at differences and similarities

3
  • in literature, poetry, novel, drama
  • flexible mega-genres, can be broken down into
    sub-genres
  • poetry epic, lyric, ballad, sonnet, haiku,
    epigram, free verse, concrete poetry, etc.
  • novel picaresque, epistolary, journals, realist
    (social or 'magical'), stream of consciousness,
    etc.

4
Tristan Todorov, The Fantastic
  • When we examine works of literature from the
    perspective of genre, we engage in a very
    particular enterprise we discover a principle
    operative in a number of texts, rather than what
    is specific about each one of them

5
Todorov
  • Which brings us to the very heart of the
    fantastic. In a world which is indeed our world,
    the one we know, a world without devils,
    sylphides, or vampires, there occurs an event
    which cannot be explained by the laws of this
    same familiar world. The person who experiences
    the event must opt for one of two possible
    solutions either he is the victim of an illusion
    of the senses, of a product of the imagination
    and laws of the world remain what they are or
    else the event has indeed taken place, it is an
    integral part of reality but then this reality
    is controlled by laws unknown to us. Either the
    devil is an illusion, an imaginary being or else
    he really exists, precisely like other living
    beings with this reservation, that we encounter
    him infrequently.

6
Todorov
  • The fantastic occupies the duration of this
    uncertainty. Once we choose one answer or the
    other, we leave the fantastic for a neighboring
    genre, the uncanny or the marvelous. The
    fantastic is that hesitation experienced by a
    person who knows only the laws of nature,
    confronting an apparently supernatural event.

7
Frye, Anatomy of Criticism
  • The essential element of plot in romance is
    adventure, which means that romance is naturally
    a sequential and processional form, hence we know
    it better from fiction than from drama. At its
    most naive it is an endless form in which a
    central character who never develops or ages goes
    through one adventure after another until the
    author himself collapses. We see this form in
    comic strips, where the central characters
    persist for years in a state of refrigerated
    deathlessness. however, no book can rival the
    continuity of the newspaper, and as soon as
    romance acheives a literary form, it tends to
    limit itself to a sequence of minor adventures
    leading up to a major or climateric adventure,
    usually announced from the beginning, the
    competion of which rounds off the story. We may
    call this major adventure, the element that gives
    literary form to the romance, the quest.

8
Frye, Anatomy of Criticism
  • melos - medody musical quality
  • opsis seeing, vision pictoral quality
  • epos oratorial
  • paronomasia puns
  • mythos plot, narrative What is the story
    about?
  • ethos characters and setting
  • dianoia theme, What is the point of the
    story?

9
Eric Auerbach, Mimesis
  • The dramatic occurrences of human life were seen
    by antiquity predominantly in the form of a
    change of fortune breaking in upon man from
    without and from above. In Elizabethan tragedy on
    the other hand the first specifically modern
    form of tragedy the heros individual character
    plays a much greater part in shaping his destiny.

10
  • g - gé -- génie, générosité, généologie jet,
    jeter to throw -- jetty -- project --
    projectile -- subject -- object je
  • The secret of literature is thus the secret
    itself. It is the secret place in which it
    establishes itself as the very possibility of the
    secret, the place it, literature as such, begins,
    the place of its genesis or of its geneaology,
    properly speaking. - Jacques Derrida

11
Jacques Derrida The Law of Genre
  • Before going about putting a certain example to
    the test, I shall attempt to formulate, in a
    manner as elliptical, economical, and formal as
    possible, what I shall call the law of the law of
    genre. It is precisely a principle of
    contamination, a law of impurity, a parasitical
    economy. In the code of set theories, if I may
    use it at least figuratively, I whould speak of a
    sort of participation without belonging a
    taking part in without being part of, without
    having membership in a set. The trait that marks
    membership inevitably divides, the boundary of
    the set comes to form, by invagination, an
    internal pocket larger than the whole and the
    consequences of this division and of this
    overflowing remain as singular as they are
    limitless.

12
  • Canon comes from Greek meaning 'measuing rod' or
    list reed
  • both taken over by early Christianity
  • 'Canon law' rules of the Church
  • 'the canon' list of books of the Bible seen as
    genuine
  • later, also work that Church fathers saw as
    authoratative, orthodox
  • distinguised from apocryphal works, fake
  • and heretical works, blasphemous, forbidden

13
  • What about concept of classic?
  • writers and their works, first class
  • stood the test of time
  • contrast to other work, minor, common, popular
  • first used as study of Latin and Greek from
    sixteenth century onwards
  • so texts identified with 'the ancients' rather
    than with 'the moderns'
  • but vernacular writers, Dante, Chaucer,
    Shakespeare, Milton also hailed as classics

14
Louis Althusser, "A New Theory of Law" in
Montesquieu Politics and History
  • A refusal to subordinate the material of
    political facts to religious and moral
    principles, a refusal to suborninate it to the
    abstract concepts of the theory of natural law,
    which are nothing but disguised value judgements,
    that is what clears away the prejudices and opens
    the royal roads of science. That is what
    introduces Montesquieu's great theoretical
    revolutions. ... "Laws...are the necessary
    relations arising from the nature of things."
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