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Final Project: Literary Critique Final Project Overview AP English 12 Ms. Barrett.

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Presentation on theme: "Final Project: Literary Critique Final Project Overview AP English 12 Ms. Barrett."— Presentation transcript:

1 Final Project: Literary Critique Final Project Overview AP English 12 Ms. Barrett

2 What’s the Point? 1.Add another novel to your repertoire 2.Practice college level literary analysis 3.Show all you have learned 4.Learn more about something that interests you

3 Requirements 7+ pages Thesis + outline Annotated bibliography 2 primary sources 5 secondary sources MLA citation Optional 5 min. presentation

4 What’s the Focus? Theme Idea about some aspect of life Technique Devices Archetypes Innovations Theory Methods of examining literature

5 What is Literary Theory? "Literary theory" is the body of ideas and methods we use in the practical reading of literature. By literary theory we refer not to the meaning of a work of literature but to the theories that reveal what literature can mean. Literary theory is a description of the underlying principles, one might say the tools, by which we attempt to understand literature. (Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy)Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy

6 Lots of Literary Theories! Formalism and New Criticism Marxist Political Theory Structuralism and Poststructuralism Also Postmodernism New Historicism Ethnic Studies and Postcolonialism Gender Studies and Queer Theory Cyborg Theory Digital Humanities …it gets crazy

7 Formalism/New Criticism “Formalism” is, as the name implies, an interpretive approach that emphasizes literary form and the study of literary devices within the text. Formalism = New Criticism; each theory views “the work of literature as an aesthetic object independent of historical context and as a unified whole that reflected the unified sensibility of the artist.”

8 Marxist Theory “Marxist literary theories tend to focus on the representation of class conflict as well as the reinforcement of class distinctions through the medium of literature.” Fun Note: Marxist analyses of society and history have had a profound effect on literary theory and practical criticism, most notably in the development of ‘New Historicism’ and ‘Cultural Materialism.’”

9 Structuralism and Poststructuralism Super Confusing and Super Fun! Signifiers (words, marks, symbols) are arbitrary Within the way a particular society uses language and signs, meaning was constituted by a system of ‘differences’ between units of the language. underlying structures of signification > particular meaning

10 Structuralism and Poststructuralism Still Super Confusing and Super Fun! Advocates of ‘Deconstruction’ calls into question the possibility of the coherence of discourse, or the capacity for language to communicate.

11 New Historicism No Neutral Inquiry! Literature is embedded Context is key!

12 Gender Studies and Queer Theory Feminist gender theory is postmodern in that it challenges the paradigms and intellectual premises of western thought but also takes an activist stance by proposing frequent interventions and alternative epistemological positions meant to change the social order. "Queer theory" questions the fixed categories of sexual identity and the cognitive paradigms generated by normative definitions of man, woman, and sexuality.

13 Pursue Your Thematic Interests! Ms. B’s Favorites! The Unkown Eternity/Infinity Illusion Fulfilment Dystopia Evolution Intellectualism How about You? Alienation Family Love Dystopia Contribution to society Art Nature God

14 Literary Movements of Interest Romanticism Realism Victorian Modernists Postmodernism

15 Romanticism Individual’s relationship with nature “hidden significance in common things” (Downes) Notable authors: Coleridge, Blake, Keats Hawthorne Melville Poe Dumas and Hugo

16 Realism Everyday things, everyday life Working class characters Poverty, hardship, and crime Notable authors: Dostoevsky Steinbeck Joyce Conrad

17 Victorian Rise of the middle class in the time of Queen Victoria Class-conflict Concerned with “self- image,” technology, and hypocrisy Notable authors: Dickens Oscar Wilde George Eliot H.G. Wells

18 Modernism “search for technical excellence” & “purity” “exotic imagery, musicality and pessimism” (Downes) Nature’s indifference Notable authors: Hemmingway Fitzgerald D.H. Lawrence Virginia Woolf Ralph Ellison

19 Postmodernism “Superficial and random in choice of subject” Magic realism Mix of “high” and “low” humor Notable Authors: Vonnegut Heller Nabakov Pynchon


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