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for biocultural literary criticism

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Presentation on theme: "for biocultural literary criticism"— Presentation transcript:

1 for biocultural literary criticism
Analytic Concepts for biocultural literary criticism

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3 Four Levels of Analysis in a Biocultural Critique

4 Human nature

5 Human nature Specific cultures

6 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists

7 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists Particular works of

8 Human nature

9 Human nature Motives, Passions = Human life history

10 Human nature

11 Human nature

12 Human nature Specific cultures

13 Human nature Specific cultures

14 Human nature Specific cultures

15 Human nature Specific cultures

16 Human nature Specific cultures

17 Human nature Specific cultures

18 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists

19 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists

20 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists Particular works of

21 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists

22 Human nature Specific cultures Individual artists Particular works of

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24 Let’s look more closely into that inner circle— the particular work of literary art.

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26 in any interpretive analysis of fictional narrative.
Here are the units of analysis in any interpretive analysis of fictional narrative.

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28 You—the reader

29 You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story

30 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story Depicted action

31 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story Depicted action Actual and implied author

32 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Depicted action Actual and implied author

33 Formal organization of the narrative
You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Depicted action Actual and implied author Formal organization of the narrative

34 The Meaning and Effect of the Story

35 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Depicted action:

36 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot

37 The Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied author:
Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author:

38 The Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied author:
Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view

39 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view

40 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: knowledge, values, responses Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view

41 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: knowledge, values, responses Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view Formal organization of the narrative:

42 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: knowledge, values, responses Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view Formal organization of the narrative: manner of narration epistolary, omniscient narrator, participant narrator, free indirect discourse, stream of consciousness, etc.

43 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: knowledge, values, responses Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view Formal organization of the narrative: manner of narration epistolary, omniscient narrator, participant narrator, free indirect discourse, stream of consciousness, etc. Narrative structure scene and summary, exposition and description, pacing, temporal sequencing, etc.

44 The Meaning and Effect of the Story
Actual and implied readers: knowledge, values, responses Depicted action: characters, setting, and plot Actual and implied author: persona, stance, point of view Formal organization of the narrative: manner of narration epistolary, omniscient narrator, participant narrator, free indirect discourse, stream of consciousness, etc. Narrative structure scene and summary, exposition and description, pacing, temporal sequencing, etc. Style word choice, syntax, rhetorical rhythm, sentence and paragraph structure, figures of speech, imagery, symbols, etc.

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46 Those are the parts of the story you interpret.

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48 What about you, the interpreter?

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50 Formal organization of the narrative
You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Depicted action Actual and implied author Formal organization of the narrative

51 You—the reader The Meaning and Effect of the Story

52 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all

53 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all
Your stance, identity, point of view:

54 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all
Your stance, identity, point of view: Your attitudes, beliefs, feelings, tastes, needs, interests

55 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all
Your stance, identity, point of view: Your attitudes, beliefs, feelings, tastes, needs, interests Your general knowledge

56 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all
Your stance, identity, point of view: Your attitudes, beliefs, feelings, tastes, needs, interests Your general knowledge Your specific scholarly knowledge relevant to this text

57 You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all
Your stance, identity, point of view: Your attitudes, beliefs, feelings, tastes, needs, interests Your general knowledge Your specific scholarly knowledge relevant to this text Your theoretical ideas about literature

58 Your theoretical ideas about literature

59 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Your theoretical ideas about literature

60 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Economics and sociology (Marxism, Foucauldian cultural theory) Your theoretical ideas about literature

61 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Economics and sociology (Marxism, Foucauldian cultural theory) Speculative psychology (Freudianism, Jungian archetypalism) Your theoretical ideas about literature

62 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Economics and sociology (Marxism, Foucauldian cultural theory) Speculative psychology (Freudianism, Jungian archetypalism) Gender theory (feminism, queer theory) Your theoretical ideas about literature

63 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Economics and sociology (Marxism, Foucauldian cultural theory) Speculative psychology (Freudianism, Jungian archetypalism) Gender theory (feminism, queer theory) Linguistic theory (deconstruction, speech-act theory) Your theoretical ideas about literature

64 Your theoretical ideas about literature
Traditional humanism (pluralist theory subordinated to common knowledge) Economics and sociology (Marxism, Foucauldian cultural theory) Speculative psychology (Freudianism, Jungian archetypalism) Gender theory (feminism, queer theory) Linguistic theory (deconstruction, speech-act theory) Biology (literary Darwinism) Your theoretical ideas about literature

65 Biology (literary Darwinism)

66 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology encompasses the subject areas of the other theories:

67 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology encompasses the subject areas of the other theories: socioeconomics,

68 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology encompasses the subject areas of the other theories: socioeconomics, psychology,

69 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology encompasses the subject areas of the other theories: socioeconomics, psychology, gender,

70 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology encompasses the subject areas of the other theories: socioeconomics, psychology, gender, and language.

71 Biology (literary Darwinism)

72 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology is comprehensive,

73 Biology (literary Darwinism) but it is not pluralistic.
Evolutionary biology is comprehensive, but it is not pluralistic.

74 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology is comprehensive, but it is not pluralistic. It is a scientific paradigm.

75 Biology (literary Darwinism)
Evolutionary biology is comprehensive, but it is not pluralistic. It is a scientific paradigm. It replaces obsolete speculative theories and puts knowledge about their subject areas on a sound scientific footing.

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77 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot The formal organization of the narrative

78 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot The formal organization of the narrative

79 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot The formal organization of the narrative

80 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

81 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

82 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

83 Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers
Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

84 For a biocultural critic, the depicted action, the implied author,
the organization of the narrative, and the responses of readers are all located in a biocultural context. Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

85 Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers
Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

86 Human nature and culture
Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

87 Individual artist and particular work of art Human nature and culture
Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human universals: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms The formal organization of the narrative

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89 To illustrate these categories, I’ll fill them in with terms from Yu Hua’s novel To Live.

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91 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers Biocultural Complex Human nature: motives, emotions, personality traits, social dynamics The implied author The depicted behaviors: characters, setting, and plot A specific cultural context: social organization, religion, myths, ideologies, artistic traditions, conventional forms Functional structure of the parts

92 Biocultural Literary Criticism
You—the reader, the critic, the person who makes sense of it all Meaning and Effect of the Story Actual and implied readers of To Live Biocultural Complex Human nature Yu Hua The life of Xu Fugui China in the Maoist period Narrative structure of To Live

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94 Thanks for your Attention.


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