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New Criticism . & Some More Love Poems. Central Questions. How do we read a poem/text? What do we look for, the author ’ s intention, our own psychological projection, “ the meaning ” conveyed through both form and content, or the ways a text respond to its time?
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New Criticism & Some More Love Poems
Central Questions • How do we read a poem/text? What do we look for, the author’s intention, our own psychological projection, “the meaning” conveyed through both form and content, or the ways a text respond to its time? • What are the values in reading literature? Is it the finest example of culture? • What is culture? 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”? • Are we ultimately free? Is our subjectivity unified or fragmentary?
Outline Literature as a profession; a Religion and the only solution to worldly chaos. • Key Words • Matthew Arnold: Culture vs. Anarchy • T. S. Eliot: Literary values defined • New Criticism: organicism & methods • Victorian love poems in the context of the Victorian vs. Modern Views of Love from idealism & repression to disunity and franker views of the body and desire)
Key Words • Hellenism vs. Philistinism (Arnold) (Bertens 2-5) • Dissociation of Sensibility; Objective Correlative (Eliot) (Bertens 12-13) • Intentional Fallacy; Affective Fallacy; Heresy of Paraphrase (New Critics) (Bertens 22-23) • Liberal Humanism (Bertens 6)
Culture: “the best that has been thought and said” Hellenism: Greek culture as an example timeless and universal Intellectual refinement and sensibility, disinterestedness, spiritual activity Anarchy: caused by capitalism and middle-class Protestantism. Philistinism: self-centered, materialistic M. Arnold: Hellenism vs. Philistinism Bertens 2-5
Arnold (2): Art’s 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. • Good questions on p. 8
objective correlative客觀對應物 (T.S. Eliot) • An external object used to convey the writer’s 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”)
objective correlative: e.g.客觀對應物 (T.S. Eliot) • e.g. Images of coldness in Hardy’s “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(乙醚麻醉) upon a table” ( Are they objective or subjective?)
T. S. Eliot: his Value Judgment • dislikes PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY and Tennyson 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
New Criticism: Major Assumptions(Bertens 21-23 ) • A poem is an autonomy (獨立個體), its meanings decided by itself alone, but not by the author’s intention or the reader’s emotional responses to it. Intentional Fallacy (意圖謬誤), Affective Fallacy (感情謬誤) • Poetry offers a different kind of truth (poetic truth) than science, conveyed through its dense language which cannot be translated. Heresy of Paraphrase
Major Assumptions —Textual Autonomy • the poet‘s mind as a catalyst (觸媒) Experience, objective correlatives CO2+葉綠素 光合作用 Organic whole
New Criticism: Major Assumption (2)– organic wholeness organic unity: • 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, ...
New Criticism: Methodology • New Criticism’s synonyms = objective criticism, practical criticism, textual criticism, close reading • the "text and the text alone" approach
New Criticism on Poetry (Bressler 44 - 45) • 1. Pay close attention to the text’s diction its meanings (connotation and denotation) and even its etymological roots. • 2. Study the poetic elements closely. e.g.詩律(prosody)、比喻語言(明喻、暗喻、擬人法、頓呼法) • 3. Search for structure and patterns; e.g. oppositions in the text (paradox, ambiguity, irony) • 4. From Parts to an Organic Wholeness
New Criticism: Methodology (1) Poetry Whole Themes pattern, tension, ambiguities, paradox, contradictions • Parts • Denotations, connotations and etymological roots • Allusions • Prosody • Relationships among the various elements
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
Victorian love poemsin the context of the Victorian vs. Modern Views of Love A Woman’s Desire: EBB Ending of love: Barbara Allen A Man’s Desire for Possession
Female Desire Nude With a Dog 1861-61 (later dated 1868) Gustave Courbet Innocence, implied sexuality
Egon Schiele (Austria : 1890 - 1918) Female Desire KNEELING NUDE, 1918 http://www.donagrafik.com/WUK_KATALOG/HTML/31_e.html Nu a la pantoufle a carreaux (1917) http://www.pyb.com.au/ptcds/pcres/focus/schiele.htm
E. B. Browning • “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) Her life: • Threatened with lung disease, lived in a darkened room with few visitors (after her brother’s death by drowning). • Married before elopement. (still following the Victorian moral codes) • Her elopement with Browning “cured her invalidism.”
E. B. Browning (2) : Critical Reception of EBB as a poet • “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'. • Victorians –saw her as a major poet, good enough to be considered for laureatship; • Later critics – see her as an adjunct to her husband • Contemporary feminists – read her work as Victorian feminist writings
Her sonnets • Different from the Renaissance sonnets because she talks mostly about her own love (and doubts), but not her lover.
Her 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 her 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.)
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.html )
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: • 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).
Sonnet 26 • Thesis: • Form: • two part (before-after) structure; broken by “your” arrival. • Nasal sounds associated with visions, and explosives with the lover. • Content: • Personification: visions as they • Ambiguities: “wants,”“God’s gifts”; what “overcame” her with satisfaction?
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 beloved’s “beat double”
E. B. Browning (3) : desire • Exchange of a lock of hair: • R. Browning “Give me . . . so much of you—all precious that you are—as may be given in a lock of your hair—I will live and die with it.” • Sonnets from the Portuguese (1850) • “. . .from my poet’s 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)
V. Ending • Arthur Hughes (1832-1915) Aurora Leigh's Dismissal of Romney- (The Tryst) 1860 http://freespace.virgin.net/k.peart/Victorian/hugheslove.htm The lovers composed, with reasons (the book) clearly given.
M. Ending Edward Munch Ashes (1894) Both lovers frustrated, in a mess.
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 liteterally; e.g. Wuthering Heights; Dante Gabriel Rossetti)
Barbara Allen • Ballad: • brevity (omission of some plot), • matter-of-fact tone; • repetition with variation • Why do you think Barbara Allen rejects the young man? And why does she die? • How is the young man presented? • How does the form of ballad adds depths to this ballad?
Barbara Allen • Thesis: Though apparently about unrequited love and reunion after death, Barbara’s motivation in refusing the young man or death is not clear. • Form: • Repetition: “slowly”“Goodbye” • the turning point: one line said by Barbara to Grove; • External actions (words) described but not inner feelings; • Content • Why does she know that he is dying? • What type of sorrow does she die of? • “dying”“soft and narrow” bed
Barbara Allen: another version, misunderstanding 4. "Don't you remember the other day When you were in the tavern, I toasted all the ladies there And slighted Barbara Allen?" 5. "O yes, I remember the other day When we were in the Tavern, I toasted all the ladies there, Gave my love to Barbara Allen." 9. . . .Sweet William died for me today, I'll die for him tomorrow." 11. . . . And out of hers, a briar.
Different musical versions • http://entertainment.msn.com/Song/?song=1256807Barbara Allen on Angel Clare by Art Garfunkel • The same music • Another version
Male Desire Jean-Leon Gerome (1824-1904) (French) "Phryne before the Areopagus“ 1861 http://www.kingsgalleries.com/1024x768/galleries/gerome/expanded/picture-12.htm
Male Desire S. Dali The Great Masturbator 1929
Male Desire in “Porphyria’s Lover” • Dramatic Monologue: elements – • situation, “who, where, when, and why” • the listener, • Can you analyze the working of this speaker’s mind? Is he sane or insane? Where do you see the clues? • How is Porphyria presented?
Male Desire in “Porphyria’s Lover” • Thesis: The speaker, with his deranged mind, solves all the conflicts in Porphyria, but not his desire to control and be controlled. • Form: • one continuous speech without stanza divisions; • Content • The lover: deranged and disturbed; • Porphyria: active, pleading, in conflict; • Final attempt at getting a pure and eternal love. • Paradoxes: speaker, both passive and active; P: alive after death • Final appeal to God
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.
Readings for next week • “Psychoanalytic Criticism” chap 3 (pp 147-153 Reader: 29- 32 ) • "Eveline" by James Joyce (Reader: 67-69)