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Literary Criticism

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Title: Literary Criticism


1
Literary Criticism
  • Class 7

2
  • Michel Foucault
  • (1926-1984)

3
  • Influences post-structuralism, New Historicism,
    cultural studies, queer theory, literature and
    medicine, institutional bases of writers and
    critics, identity formation. (Norton 1615)
  • Edward Said Orientalism, or Western discourse of
    the East

4
  • 1961 Madness and Civilization
  • 1963 The Birth of the Clinic
  • 1966 The Order of Things
  • 1969 The Archaeology of Knowledge
  • 1975 Discipline and Punish The Birth of the
    Prison
  • 1976 The History of Sexuality

5
  • Key Terms

6
Discourse (1)
  • Briefly, language as it is used by and within
    various constituencies (the law, medicine, the
    church, for example) for purposes to do with
    power relationships between people.
  • (Wolfreys 65)
  • Discourse ideology in action
  • (Dobie 170)

7
Discourse (2)
  • Human subjectivity and identity itself is
    produced out of various discursive formations as
    a result of the subjects entry into language.
  • Language is always already shot through and
    informed by figurations and encryptions of power
    . . . relationships and networks.
    (Wolfreys 66)

8
Discourse (3)
  • Through discourse, knowledge power.
  • Discourse disposes it puts everything in its
    place. Modern power penetrates everywhere, giving
    a specific name to every possible variant of
    human action so as to master the world and leave
    nothing unexamined, unknown, uncatalogued.
    (Norton 1619)

9
Discursive Formation
  • The principle of dispersion and redistribution
    of discourse
  • A structurally interactive flow serving,
    inescapably, a political or ideological function
  • (Wolfreys 69)

10
Episteme
  • Deep-rooted, unconscious structures for
    organizing knowledge.
  • (Norton 1616)
  • The rules and constraints outside which
    individuals cannot think or speak without running
    the risk of being excluded or silenced.
  • (Dobie 170)

11
Genealogy (1)
  • Describing the present through an analysis of the
    forces that created it. (Norton 1616)
  •  Genealogy does not claim to be more true than
    institutionalized knowledge, but merely to be the
    missing part of the puzzle. 
  • http//www.california.com/rathbone/foucau10.
    htm

12
Genealogy (2)
  • It works by isolating the central components of
    some current day political mechanism and then
    traces it back to its historical roots. These
    historical roots are visible to us only through
    two separate bodies of genealogical knowledge
    the dissenting opinions and theories that did not
    become the established and the local beliefs and
    understandings. http//www.california.com/rathbon
    e/foucau10.htm

13
Power
  • Depersonalized Power does not belong to anyone,
    nor does it all emanate from one specific
    location, such as the state.
  • Decentered Rather, power is diffused throughout
    the capillaries (???) of the social system.

  • (Norton 1618)

14
Power/Knowledge
  • The production of knowledge is wedded to
    productive power. Modern power requires
    increasingly narrow categories through which it
    analyzes, differentiates, identifies, and
    administers individuals. (Norton 1620)

15
Body Politics
  • Power operates through the daily disciplines and
    routines to which bodies are subjected.
    (Norton 1618)

16
Why is Foucault a post-structuralist?
  • By focusing on the larger systematic social
    forces, Foucault highlights the social
    construction of the subject and thereby
    deconstructs the self.
    (Norton 1617)

17
Anti-humanism
  • He objects to humanism, esp. its claim that we
    are individuals with unique nature, possessing
    coherent interior identities, motives, desires,
    and conscious intentions.
  • (Norton 1617)

18
Counter-enlightenment
  • Connected the rise of the individual with a
    tremendous decrease in freedom.
  • In each case, an institution demands, examines
    and watches over all subjects, and punishes
    deviants.
  • Such a society is prisonlike, or carceral.
  • (Norton
    1618)

19
Anti-Marxism
  • Foucault contends that since power operates in
    innumerable places and taking many different
    forms, there is no single privileged place for
    the political activist to go to work, no locus of
    power whose removal will bring the whole system
    tumbling down. (Norton 1618)

20
New Historicism (1)
  • New Historicism gives equal weighting to
    literary and non-literary material (Barry 174).
  • It is a mode of study in which literary and
    non-literary texts are given equal weight and
    constantly inform or interrogate each other
    (Barry 172).

21
New Historicism (2)
  • Old Historicism
  • (1) Were the characters based on real people?
  • (2) Do the events recounted in the text
    re-create experiences from the authors life?
  • (3) Does the text capture the spirit of the
    times accurately? (Dobie 167)

22
New Historicism (3)
  • New Historicism
  • How does the text reveal and comment on the
    disparate discourses of the culture it depicts?
    (Dobie 167)

23
Food for Thought (1)
  • What did you learn in kindergarten?

24
Food for Thought (2)
  • What are you told to do when you go to the
    hospital?

25
Food for Thought (3)
  • Foucault argues that modern societies intervene
    from day one to shape, train, and normalize
    individuals (Norton 1618). Do you agree? What
    social institutions have been involved in doing
    this to you?

26
Food for Thought (4)
  • What information would you hold back from your CC
    teacher? How about your boss?

27
Questions to Ask of a Text (1)
  • What various discourses do you meet in the text?
  • Which ones are powerful?
  • Which represent the experience of people who have
    traditionally been overlooked, marginalized, or
    misrepresented?
  • What conflicts do you discern in the text between
    the discourse of the powerful and that of the
    powerless? (Dobie 180)

28
Questions to Ask of a Text (2)
  • What are the social rules observed in the text?
  • Is the text critical of them? Or does it treat
    them as models of behavior?
  • How does this text support or challenge the
    values, beliefs, and/or practices of the culture
    it depicts?
  • How does the ideological stance imply about the
    culture it depicts, that of the authors time,
    and that of subsequent periods? (Dobie 180)

29
  • Michel Foucault
  • The Carceral.
  • Discipline and Punish
  • The Birth of the Prison.

30
Jeremy Bentham's nineteenth-century prisonThe
"Panopticon"
http//www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/engl/theory/new
historicism/modules/foucaultcarceralmainframe.html

31
Prison cell
32
Prison school
http//www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/engl/theory/new
historicism/modules/foucaultcarceralmainframe.html

33
(Fludernik 44)
34
References
  • Dobie, Ann B. Theory into Practice.
    Thomson/Heinle, 2002.
  • Fludernik, Monica. Carceral Topography
    Spatiality, Liminality, and Corporeal in the
    Literary Prison.Textual Practice, 1999 Spring
    13 (1) 43-77.
  • Leitch, Vincent B, ed. The Norton Anthology of
    Theory and Criticism. 2001.
  • Wolfreys, Julian. Critical Keywords in Literary
    and Cultural Theory. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
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