Monday, July 1, 2019

Literary Criticism and Theory Part III


Literary Criticism and Theory—Part III
9. Mathew Arnold: Study of Poetry
Snippets
1. Arnold’s most famous piece of literary criticism is his essay “The Study of Poetry.” In this work, Arnold is fundamentally concerned with poetry’s “high destiny;” he believes that “mankind will discover that we have to turn to poetry to interpret life for us, to console us, to sustain us” as science and philosophy will eventually prove flimsy and unstable.
2. Arnold’s essay concerns itself with articulating a “high standard” and “strict judgment” in order to avoid the fallacy of valuing certain poems (and poets) too highly, and lays out a method for discerning only the best and therefore “classic” poets (as distinct from the description of writers of the ancient world). Arnold’s classic poets include Milton, Shakespeare, Dante, and Homer; and the passages he presents from each are intended to show how their poetry is timeless and moving.
3. For Arnold, feeling and sincerity are paramount, as is the seriousness of subject: “The superior character of truth and seriousness, in the matter and substance of the best poetry, is inseparable from the superiority of diction and movement marking its style and manner.” An example of an indispensable poet who falls short of Arnold’s “classic” designation is Geoffrey Chaucer, who, Arnold states, ultimately lacks the “high seriousness” of classic poets.
4. At the root of Arnold’s argument is his desire to illuminate and preserve the poets he believes to be the touchstones of literature, and to ask questions about the moral value of poetry that does not champion truth, beauty, valor, and clarity. Arnold’s belief that poetry should both uplift and console drives the essay’s logic and its conclusions.
5. The essay was originally published as the introduction to T. H. Ward’s anthology, The English Poets (1880). It appeared later in Essays in Criticism, Second Series.
6. Arnold terms poetry as a criticism of life thereby refuting the accusation of Plato and says that as time goes on man will continue to find comfort and solace in poetry.
7. Arnold says that when one reads poetry he tends to estimate whether it is of the best form or not. It happens in three ways- the real estimate, the historic estimate, and the personal estimate. The real estimate is an unbiased viewpoint that takes into account both the historical context and the creative faculty to judge the worth of poetry. But the real estimate is often surpassed by the historic and personal estimate. The historic estimate places the historical context above the value of the art itself. The personal estimate on the other hand depends on the personal taste, the likes and dislikes of the reader which affects his judgment of poetry. Arnold says that both these estimates tend to be fallacious.
8. Arnold here speaks about the idea of imitation. He says that whatever one reads or knows keeps on coming back to him. Thus if a poet wants to reach the high standards of the classics he might consciously or unconsciously imitate them. This is also true for critics who tend to revert to the historic and personal estimate instead of an unbiased real estimate. The historic estimate affects the study of ancient poets while the personal estimate affects the study of modern or contemporary poets.
9. Arnold proposes the ‘touchstone’ method of analyzing poetry in order to determine whether it is of a high standard or not. He borrows this method from Longinus who said in his idea of the sublime that if a certain example of sublimity can please anyone regardless of habits, tastes or age and can please at all times then it can be considered as a true example of the sublime. This method was first suggested in England by Addison who said that he would have a man read classical works which have stood the test of time and place and also those modern works which find high praise among contemporaries.
10. Then Arnold moves on to speak about Byron, Shelley and Wordsworth but does not pass any judgement on their poetry. Arnold believes that his estimate of these poets will be influenced by his personal passion as they are closer to his age than the classics and also because their writings are of a more personal nature.
11. Finally Arnold speaks about the self-preservation of the classics. Any amount of good literature will not be able to surpass the supremacy of the classics as they have already stood the test of time and people will continue to enjoy them for the ages to come. Arnold says that this is the result of the self preserving nature of humanity. Human nature will remain the same throughout the ages and those parts of the classics dealing with the subject will remain relevant at all times thus preserving themselves from being lost in time.
Expected Questions
1. Which of the following arrangements of Matthew Arnold’s critical works is in the correct chronological sequence?
a. Preface to the poems—On translating Homer--- Essays in Criticism (1st series)—Culture and Anarchy--- Essays in Criticism (2nd series)
b. On Translating Homer--- Culture and Anarchy--- Essays in Criticism (1st and 2nd series), Preface to the poems.
c. Culture and Anarchy--- Preface to Poems--- Essays in Criticism (1st and 2nd series)--- On Translating Homer
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Works in criticism: 1. Preface to the Poems (1853) 2. On translating Homer (1861) 3. Essays in Criticism (1st series) (1865) 4. Culture and Anarchy (1869) 5. Essays in criticism (2nd series) (1888).
2. The function of Criticism is not merely “judgement in literature” but “a disinterested endeavour to learn and propogate the best that is known and thought in the world, and thus to establish a current of fresh and new ideas.” Who expressed this opinion?
a. Ruskin
b. Carlyle
c. Arnold
d. I.A. Richards
Ans: C
Explanation: He gave importance to the propagation of best ideas for the promotion of culture. The function of criticism is to prepare a congenial atmosphere for the prevalence of best ideas. A poet must live in an atmosphere of best ideas.
3. In which essay Arnold defines poetry as “a criticism of life under the conditions fixed for such a criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty?”
a. Wordsworth
b. Shelley
c. The Study of poetry
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: The greatness of a poet lies in his powerful and beautiful application of ideas to life,-- to the question—how to live? A poetry of revolt against moral ideas is a poetry of revolt against life, a poetry of indifference to moral ideas is a poetry of indifference to life. In poetry, however, this criticism of life has to be made comfortably to the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty.
4. “An excellent action”, according to Arnold, must have :
a. High seriousness and weight of meaning
b. Agony and ecstasy
c. An excitement of human emotions
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation:  In the Preface(1853) he asserts that “excellent action”, unfolded by “appropriate treatment” so that it may afford joy, is the apt subject for poetic composition. A poet should deal with “great actions, calculated powerfully and delightfully to affect what is permanent in human soul.”
5. A critic commented on Arnold’s contribution to criticism: “Aristotle shows us the critic in relation to art. Arnold shows us the critic in relation to the public. Aristotle dissects a work of art, Arnold dissects a critic.” Who made this comment?
a. George Saintsbury
b. J.W.H. Atkins
c. David Daiches
d. Scott James
Ans: D
Explanation: Rolfe Arnold Scott-James (1878-1959) was a notable British journalist, editor and literary critic in early twentieth-century literature. He is often cited as one of the first people to use the word "modernism" in his 1908 book Modernism and Romance, in which he writes, "there are characteristics of modern life in general which can only be summed up, as Mr. Thomas Hardy and others have summed them up, by the word, modernism".
10. T.S. Eliot’s Tradition and Individual Talent
Snippets
1. ‘Tradition and the Individual Talent’ (1919) sees Eliot defending the role of tradition in helping new writers to be modern. This is one of the central paradoxes of Eliot’s writing – indeed, of much modernism – that in order to move forward it often looks to the past, even more directly and more pointedly than previous poets had. This theory of tradition also highlights Eliot’s anti-Romanticism.
2. Unlike the Romantics’ idea of original creation and inspiration, Eliot’s concept of tradition foregrounds how important older writers are to contemporary writers: Homer and Dante are Eliot’s contemporaries because they inform his work as much as those alive in the twentieth century do. James Joyce looked back to ancient Greek myth (the story of Odysseus) for his novel set in modern Dublin, Ulysses (1922). Ezra Pound often looked back to the troubadours and poets of the Middle Ages. H. D.’s Imagist poetry was steeped in Greek references and ideas.
3. He goes on to argue that a modern poet should write with the literature of all previous ages ‘in his bones’, as though Homer and Shakespeare were his (or her) contemporaries: ‘This historical sense, which is a sense of the timeless as well as of the temporal T. S. Eliot 2and of the timeless and of the temporal together, is what makes a writer traditional. And it is at the same time what makes a writer most acutely conscious of his place in time, of his contemporaneity.’
4. In short, knowledge of writers of the past makes contemporary writers both part of that tradition and part of the contemporary scene. Eliot’s own poetry, for instance, is simultaneously in the tradition of Homer and Dante and the work of a modern poet, and it is because of his debt to Homer and Dante that he is both modern and traditional.
5. Eliot’s essay goes on to champion impersonality over personality. That is, the poet’s personality does not matter, as it’s the poetry that s/he produces that is important. Famously, he observes: ‘Poetry is not a turning loose of emotion, but an escape from emotion; it is not the expression of personality, but an escape from personality. But, of course, only those who have personality and emotions know what it means to want to escape from these things.’
6. We might also bear in mind that Eliot knew that great poets often incorporated part of themselves into their work – he would do it himself, so that, although it would be naive to read The Waste Land as being ‘about’ Eliot’s failed marriage to his first wife, we can nevertheless see aspects of his marriage informing the poem. And in ‘Shakespeare and the Stoicism of Seneca’, Eliot would acknowledge that the poet of poets, Shakespeare, must have done such a thing: the Bard ‘was occupied with the struggle – which alone constitutes life for a poet – to transmute his personal and private agonies into something rich and strange, something universal and impersonal’.
7. For Eliot, great poets turn personal experience into impersonal poetry, but this nevertheless means that their poetry often stems from the personal. It is the poet’s task to transmute personal feelings into something more universal. Eliot is rather vague about how a poet is to do this – leaving others to ponder it at length.
Expected Questions
1. Which of the following arrangement of T.S.Eliot’s critical works is in the correct chronological order?
a. The Sacred Wood--- The use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism--- Selected Essays--- On Poetry and the Poets--- To Criticise and the Critic.
b. The Sacred Wood---On Poetry and Poets--- To Criticise the Critic--- Selected Essays---The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism
c. Selected Essays--- To Criticise the Critic--- The Sacred Wood--- On Poetry and Poets--- The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Eliot’s famous works are The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism (1933), The Idea of A Christian Society (1939), Notes Towards the Definition of Culture (1948), Selected Essays (Third edition 1951), On Poetry and Poet (1957), To Criticise and the Critic (1966) and the Sacred Wood (1921).
2. In which essay of T.S.Eliot the phrase “dissociation of sensibility” occurs?
a. Hamlet and his problems.
b. The metaphysical poets
c. Tradition and Individual Talent
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: The phrase occurs in Eliot’s essay entitled ‘The Metaphysical Poets’. He uses this phrase to describe the characteristic fault of later seventeenth century poetry.
3. In which essay of T.S. Eliot the phrase, “objective correlative” occurs?
a. Hamlet and his problems
b. The metaphysical poets
c. Tradition and Individual Talent
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Eliot believes that since the poet cannot transfer his emotions on ideas from his own mind directly to his readers, there must be some kind of mediation- “a set of objects, a situation, chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion, such that when the external facts, which must terminate in sensory experience, the emotion is immediately evoked.” It is through “objective correlative” that the transactions between the author and the reader necessarily take place.
4. Who according to Eliot, had developed “Unified Sensibility”?
a. The Elizabethans and Jacobeans
b. The Neo-classicists
c. The Romantics
d. The Victorians
Ans: A
Explanation: A unified sensibility, according to Eliot, is the true product of a true synthesis of the individual with the traditional, of feelings with thought and of temporal with the eternal. The Elizabethans and Jacobeans had developed a unifying sensibility.
5. Which among the following is the manifesto of Eliot’s Criticism?
a. Preface to the Lyrical Ballads
b. Preface to the Fables
c. Preface to Shakespeare
d. Tradition and Individual Talent
Ans: D
Explanation: Eliot’s essay ‘Tradition and Individual Talent’, first published in Times Literary Supplement in 1919, may be regarded as an unofficial manifesto of Eliot’s critical creed. This essay illustrates Eliot’s faith in classicism and tradition.
6. Tradition in Eliot’s view means:
a. Imitating the poets of the past
b. Heredity
c. Handling down of the past
d. Historic sense
Ans: D
Explanation: Tradition is not imitating the ways of the ancients blindly. Tradition can only be obtained by those who have the historical sense which involves a perception “not only of the pastness of the past, but also of its presence”.
7. Historic sense involves a perception of -----
a. History
b. The pastness of the past and also its presentness
c. A sense of the historical incidents
d. The past
Ans: B
Explanation: As in question 6.
8. Tradition implies___
a. A recognition of the continuity of literature
b. A critical judgment as to which of the writers of the past continue to be
significant in the present
c. A knowledge of these significant writers obtained through great labour
d. All the above.
Ans: D
Explanation: Tradition is the means by which the vitality of the past enriches the life of the present. In brief, the sense of tradition implies: 1. Recognition of the continuity of literature, 2. A critical judgement as to which of the writers of the past continue to be significant in the present; and 3. A knowledge of these writers through painstaking effort.
9. “The existing monuments form an ideal order among themselves, which
is modified by the introduction of the new work or art among them” whose
pronouncement is this?
a. Coleridge
b. William Wordsworth
c. T. S. Eliot
d. Aristotle
Ans: C
Explanation: T.S. Eliot is the greatest and most influential critic of the modern age. He is like Dryden because most of his criticism is written in the form of prefaces to his works with the purpose of justifying his own poetic creations.
10. In which of the following critical essays does the analogy of the catalyst
occurs?
a. Preface to the Lyrical Ballads
b. Preface to the Fables
c. Preface to Shakespeare
d. Tradition and Individual Talent
Ans: D
Explanation: Eliot’s essay Tradition and Individual Talent, first published in Times Literary Supplement in 1919, may be regarded as an unofficial manifesto of Eliot’s critical creed. This essay illustrates Eliot’s faith in classicism and tradition.
11. Cleanth Brookes, The Language of Paradox
Snippets
1. Cleanth Brooks, an eminent New Critic, advocates the centrality of paradox as a way of understanding and interpreting poetry, in his best-known works, The Language of Paradox, The Well Wrought Urn (1947) and Poetry and the Tradition” (1939). Brooks helped to formulate formalist criticism by emphasizing “the interior life of a poem” and codifying the principles of close reading.
2. In the Language of Paradox, Brooks establishes the crucial role of paradox-by demonstrating that paradox is “the language appropriate and inevitable to poetry”. This is because referential language is incapable of representing the specific message of a poet and the poet must “make up his language as he goes,” since words are mutable and, meaning shifts when words are placed in relation to one another.
3. Brooks illustrates the working of paradox by analysing ‘Lines Composed upon Westminster Bridge’, in which the speaker is able to appreciate the beauty of industrialised London just as he would appreciate any natural phenomena, as he views London as a part of nature, having been built by man, who himself is a part of nature, and who attributes his spark of life to the city.
4. Brooks ends his essay with a reading of John Donne’s poem The Canonization, which uses paradox as its underlying metaphor. In describing the speaker’s physical love as saintly, and the two lovers as appropriate candidates for canonization, Donne seems to parody both love and religion, but in fact it combines in a complex conceit. Brooks also points to secondary paradoxes in the poem: the simultaneous duality and singleness of love, and the double and contradictory meanings of “die” in Metaphysical poetry (both sexual union and literal death). He contends that these several meanings are impossible to convey at the right depth and emotion in any language but that of paradox.
Expected Questions
1. Who wrote, ‘The Well Wrought Urn’(1947) and the Modern Poetry and Tradition ( 1939)?
a. Cleanth Brookes
b. T.S.Eliot
c. I.A.Richards
4. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation:  Cleanth Brookes was an American literary critic and professor. He is best known for his contributions to New Criticism in the mid-20th century and for revolutionizing the teaching of poetry in American higher education. His best-known works, The Well Wrought Urn: Studies in the Structure of Poetry (1947) and Modern Poetry and the Tradition (1939), argue for the centrality of ambiguity and paradox as a way of understanding poetry. With his writing, Brooks helped to formulate formalist criticism, emphasizing "the interior life of a poem" and codifying the principles of close reading.
2. It is the anomalous juxtaposition of incongruous ideas for the sake of striking exposition or unexpected insight. Which literary device is this?
a. Irony
b. Paradox
c. Metaphor
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: It functions as a method of literary composition and analysis which involves examining apparently contradictory statements and drawing conclusions either to reconcile them or to explain their presence.
3. Cleanth Brookes, an active member of the New Critical movement, outlines the use of reading poems through____ as a method of critical interpretation.
a. Paradox
b. Analysis
c. Close reading
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation:  Paradox in poetry means that tension at the surface of a verse can lead to apparent contradictions and hypocrisies.
4. Brookes ends his essay with a reading of John Donne’s poem “The Canonization”, which uses a paradox as its underlying _____.
a. Similie
b. Irony
c. Metaphor
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: Using a charged religious term to describe the speaker’s physical love as saintly, Donne effectively argues that in rejecting the material world and withdrawing to a world of each other, the two lovers are appropriate candidates for canonization. This seems to parody both love and religion, but in fact it combines them, pairing unlikely circumstances and demonstrating their resulting complex meaning.
5. Who wrote the essay, “The Critical Monism of Cleanth Brooks”, which argues strongly against Brook’s centrality of paradox?
a. I.A. Richards
b. R.S. Crane
c. Salisbury
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Brooks believes that the very structure of poetry is paradox, and ignores the other subtleties of imagination and power that poets bring to their poems.
12. Northrop Frye "Archetypes of Literature"
Snippets
1. ‘Archetypal Literary criticism’ is concerned to analyzing a text in concern to the myths and archetypes that could be in the text in the form of description, symbols, images, allusions, references, characteristic traits, etc. This type of criticism appeared in the literary field in 1934 with the publication of Maud Bodkin’s ‘Archetypal Patterns in Poetry’.
2. Archetypal Criticism enjoyed the greatest popularity during the 1940s and 1950s. The main contributor to its popularity back then was Northrop Frye, a Canadian literary critic. The field has not seen much evolution since then and is not much in practice at present. However, it forms an important inclusion in the tradition of literary criticism.
3. Frye shows no concern to the origin of the archetypes. All he states is that the archetypes make the concepts of the universe better understandable for the human beings. The archetypes develop in accordance to ‘human needs and concerns’ which makes them proper for human life.
4. Frye has identified two major categories – comedic, further subdivided into comedy and romance; and, tragic, further subdivided into tragedy and satire.
5. He has also identified a connection between various seasons and the different literary genres. For instance, he associates comedy to the season of spring, tragedy to autumn, satire with winter and romance to summer. He has also identified logic for this association. Comedy is basically about the birth and revival of the hero as spring is symbolic of victory over winter. Tragedy is associated to the downfall of the protagonist as autumn suggests the demise of the seasonal calendar. Satire depends on mockery and is concerned to insignificance of the hero. That is why it has been associated to winter, which symbolizes the absence of productivity. Similarly, summer refers to conclusion of the seasonal calendar as romance usually ends with an achievement, most commonly in the form of marriage.
6. Frye also advocates a difference in the way a symbol is interpreted in connection with different genres. In the schema that he suggests for this purpose, he identifies five different spheres, namely, human, animal, vegetation, mineral and water. While humans in comedic work for fulfillment of wishes, in tragic it acts in a tyrannical way leading to isolation and downfall. Animals are gentle and pastoral in comedic while predatory in tragic. Vegetation is represented by the formations like gardens, parks and flowers in case of comic; in case of tragic, it is present in form of wild forest or barren land. Cities, temples, precious stones, etc. represent the mineral sphere in comedic which is represented by deserts, ruins and the likes in case of tragic. While the sphere of water is present in the form of rivers in comedic, it appears as floods, seas, etc.  So, the same spheres are to be interpreted in different ways and to the different effects in case of the comedic and the tragic works, respectively.
7. Frye accepts his schema to be simplistic. He also understands that there are some neutral archetypes as well which could not be identified as clearly to either of the tragic and the comedic. However, he has made the concept quite clear to make the analysis of the archetypes clearer in accordance to the genre under consideration.
Expected Questions
1. Who defined archetype as a symbol or image ?
a. Cleanth Brooks
b. I.A. Richards
c. Northrop Frye
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: Northrop Fyre working in the field of literature defined an archetype as a symbol, usually an image, which recurs often enough in literature to be recognizable as an element of one’s literary experience as a whole.
2. Based on Northrop Frye, comedy is aligned with ____ because the genre of comedy is characterized by the birth of the hero, revival and resurrection.
a. Winter
b. Spring
c. Autumn
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Spring symbolizes the defeat of winter and darkness.
3. Which is the culmination of life in the seasonal calendar according to Northrop Frye?
a. Summer
b. Winter
c. Autumn
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Romance and summer are paired together because summer is the culmination of life in the seasonal calendar; and the romance genre culminates with some sort of triumph, usually a marriage.
4. Which is the dying stage of the seasonal calendar in the opinion of Northrop Frye?
a. Winter
b. Autumn
c. Summer
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Autumn is the dying stage of the seasonal calendar, which parallels the tragedy genre because it is known for the “fall” or demise of the protagonist.
5. Which is metonymised with winter?
a. Comedy
b. Satire
c. Tragedy
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Satire is metonymised with winter on the grounds that satire is a dark genre. It is noted for its darkness, dissolution, the return of chaos, and the defeat of the heroic figure.
13. Lionel Trilling "Freud and Literature"
Snippets
1. Trilling was an American literary critic and teacher who brought psychological, sociological, and philosophical methods and insights into criticism. His critical writings include studies of Matthew Arnold (1939) and E.M. Forster (1943), as well as collections of literary essays: The Liberal Imagination (1950), Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning (1965).
2. Trilling’s  "FREUD AND LITERATURE" (1940) is an extract from his The Liberal Imagination: Essays on Literature and Society.
3. Trilling believes that Freudian psychology offers a systematic account of the human mind.

Psychoanalytical theory had a great impact on literature. But “the effect of Freud on literature has been no greater than the effect of literature on Freud”.
4. Next Trilling speaks about the influences on Freud— Schopenhauer and Nietzsche anticipated his ideas. But Freud did not read their works. It is nothing but the zeitgeist (the direction of thought of that era).
5. Trilling speaks about the influence Freud had on literature. Kafka explored Freudian concepts of guilt and punishment. Joyce and Thomas Mann looked at the rational side of Freud who was “committed to the night side of life”. Freud believed that the aim of psychoanalysis is to consider ‘the night side of life’. It is to make the ego more independent of the superego, to widen its field of vision and so to extend the field of vision and to extend the organization of the id.
6. Freud considered art as one of the charms of life. He speaks with admiration about the artists. Writers understood the motives of men. Yet sometimes he speaks with contempt about art. Art is substitute gratification – an illusion in contrast to reality. But unlike other illusions art is harmless and beneficent that ‘it does not seek to be anything but an illusion’.
7. Freud tried to show that poetry is indigenous to the very constitution of the mind. Mind is seen as a poetry-making organ.  Poetry is seen as a method of thought though unreliable and ineffective for conquering reality. The mind in one of its parts could work without logic. The unconscious mind works without any logic.
8. Freud says that in psychic life there is a repetition compulsion that goes beyond the pleasure principle. This traumatic neurosis is an attempt to mythridatize (another term from medical science, where a patient is administered small doses of poison. Ultimately, the dosage is increased and he becomes immune to poison). The nightmare that a person sees is an attempt to overcome a bad situation. By repeating it he is making a new effort to control it.
9. Freud says that in human pride is the ultimate cause of human wretchedness. Freud’s man has more dignity than any other system can give. He is an inextricable tangle of culture and biology. He is not simply good; there is a hell within him that is waiting to engulf the whole civilization. For everything he gains, he pays in equal coin.
Expected Questions
1. Who wrote the essays, The Liberal Imagination (1950), Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning (1965) ?
a. Freud
b. Coleridge
c. Lionel Trilling
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: His critical writings include studies of Matthew Arnold (1939) and E.M. Forster (1943), as well as collections of literary essays: The Liberal Imagination (1950), Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning (1965).
2. Who praised Lionel Trilling as the last great critic?
a. Nathan Glick
b. T.S. Eliot
c. Mathew Arnold
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Nathan Glick writing in the Atlantic Magazine (July 2000) praised Trilling as ‘the Last Great Critic’.
3. Who believed that the great modern writers -- D. H. Lawrence and Franz Kafka, Yeats and Eliot, Joyce and Proust, Mann and Conrad –offered a subversive attitude towards the basic tenets of liberal democracy?
a. Mathew Arnold
b. Nathan Glick
c. Lionel Trilling
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: In their works he found the abyss of terrors and mysteries.
4. Trilling’s “FREUD AND LITERATURE" (1940) is an extract from his
a. Studies of Matthew Arnold (1939) and E.M. Forster (1943)
b. The Liberal Imagination (1950)
c. Beyond Culture: Essays on Literature and Learning (1965)
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Trilling’s “FREUD AND LITERATURE" (1940) is an extract from his The Liberal Imagination: Essays on Literature and Society.
5. “The poets and philosophers before me discovered the unconscious. What I discovered was the scientific method by which the unconscious can be studied”. Who said it?
a. Lionel Trilling
b. Matthew Arnold
c. Sigmund Freud
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: When Freud’s 70th birthday was celebrated, one of the speakers in the meeting described him as “the discoverer of the unconscious”. Freud corrected the speaker and stated: “The poets and philosophers before me discovered the unconscious. What I discovered was the scientific method by which the unconscious can be studied”.
14. Viktor Shklovsky "Art as Technique"
Snippets
1. Russian Formalism was a literary movement in Russia that started in 1915, where literary scholars like Victor Shklovsky, Andrei Bely, and Potebnya had multiple theoretical aesthetics to how literature can be interpreted. In Victor Shklovsky’s article, Art As Technique, Shklovsky re-interprets Potebnya’s perspective about literature from reality and fantasy.
2. In Victor Shklovsky’s article, Art As Technique, Shklovsky argues, “Art is thinking in images.” Shklovsky’s purpose in arguing this interpretation is because he generalizes art to broaden its viewer’s horizons of how it can be interpreted. Art, from Shklovsky’s perspective, is a broad subject and can lead to multiple accusations.
3. When analyzing art to images, Shklovsky is basically describing a typical work of art to symbolize something abstract. The way Shklovsky’s argument is a re-interpretation of fantasy and reality, is that when producing a work of art, you are transforming fantasy into a reality. The reason why art and literature from Shklovsky’s perspective can have multiple accusations, is because when Shklovsky says; “Art is thinking in images,” he is stating that art can be approached from various perspectives.
4. In his well-read essay “Art as Technique” (which is also known as “Art as Device”), Shklovsky argues that literariness is simply the product of a particular use of language – it is our language of the everyday defamiliarized. That is to say, literariness is the result of working language so that it “makes strange” or interrupts our habituated or automatic perception of the word. By interrupting our automatic perception of the word in this way, the reader is forced to make extra effort in determining the meaning of the text and in so doing, Shklovsky argues, our wonder of the world is re-enlivened.
5. So, the writer’s job is to recover “the sensation of life” – that is, to render the world unusual or unfamiliar to the extent that the reader experiences the world anew. To return to his own example, it is to make the reader experience the artfulness of the stone rather than simply regard the stone as object. If one could sum up defamiliarization in a single sentence then, it might look something like this – defamiliarization is a technique by which the author can re-enliven the naturally inquisitive and literally awesome gaze of the child in the reader.
6. Perhaps the most important implication of thinking of the literary in this way is that literature itself can never again settle down. Clearly, those literary devices which once unsettled the reader will at some point become naturalized, just as the repetition of an inspiring metaphor means that it will eventually become a worn cliché. If literariness is a product of “making strange” then literature will always have to search out new ways of defamiliarizing the reading experience. Understood like this, literary history becomes the domain of discontinuities and interruptions rather than the smooth “progression” that some of the more conservative critics would advocate.
Expected Questions
1. Who founded the OPOYAS Society for the study of poetic languages?
a. Boris Pasternak
b. Andrei Bely
c. Potebnya
d. Victor Shklovsky
Ans: D
Explanation: In 1916, Victor Shklovsky founded OPOYAZ (Obshchestvo izucheniya POeticheskogo YAZyka—Society for the Study of Poetic Language), one of the two groups (with the Moscow Linguistic Circle) that developed the critical theories and techniques of Russian Formalism.
2. Who wrote the essay, ‘Art as a technique’?
a. Victor Shklovsky
b. Andrei Bely
c. Potebnya
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: "Art as Technique" (also translated as "Art as Device") comprised the first chapter of his seminal Theory of Prose, first published in 1925.
3. Who developed the concept of defamiliarization?
a. Boris Pasternak
b. Leo Tolstoy
c. Victor Shklovsky
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: He argued for the need to turn something that has become over-familiar, like a cliché in the literary canon, into something revitalized.
4. “The purpose of art is to impart the sensation of things as they are perceived and not as they are known. The technique of art is to make objects 'unfamiliar', to make forms difficult, to increase the difficulty and length of perception because the process of perception is an aesthetic end in itself and must be prolonged. Art is a way of experiencing the artfulness of an object; the object is not important”. Who said it?
a. Victor Shklovsky
b. Leo Tolstoy
c. Victor Hugo
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Shklovsky's work pushes Russian Formalism towards understanding literary activity as integral parts of social practice, an idea that becomes important in the work of Mikhail Bakhtin and Russian and Prague School scholars of semiotics.
5. Who wrote the collection of essays ‘Literature and Cinematography’ published in 1923?
a. Boris Pasternak
b. Andrei Bely
c. Potebnya
d. Victor Shklovsky
Ans: D
Explanation: Shklovsky was one of the very early serious writers on film. A collection of his essays and articles on film was published in 1923 (Literature and Cinematography, first English edition 2008). He was a close friend of director Sergei Eisenstein and published an extensive critical assessment of his life and works.
15. Raymond Williams "Realism and the Contemporary Novel"
Snippets
1. The essay ‘Realism and Contemporary Novel’ is taken from his “The Long Revolution” where he talked about the three revolutions in European society.
a. The Democratic Revolution b. The Industrial Revolution c. The Cultural Revolution. Further, he mentions these revolutions as incomplete and is continuously happening in the history of Europe. As a Marxist, he initiates his essay with the discussion on the historical aspect of English critical tradition of a century from 1859 to 1956.
2. His aims to write the Essay are: a. to discuss the existing variations in realism b. the ways in which the modern novel has developed c. to discuss the new realism.
3. He stresses on “an ordinary, contemporary, everyday reality opposed to romantic or legendary subjects.” He mentions from sociological reality to psychological during the span of the 20 century. By using the Russian terms like Narodnost, Tipichimost, Idieanot and Partisonst, he illustrates the social realism in novels. According to him, the novelist presents realism as noraodnost. .. the technical effect as an expression of spirit opposite to formalist. It rejects an ordinary technical meaning of realism where as the term Idieanot and Partinost, the terms to refer to the Ideological content and Partison affiliations to such realism. Thus they suggested the development of the ideological or revolutionary attitudes already described. Finally he uses the term “Tipichimost’ as typical characters in a typical situation.
4. Raymond Williams intended to present his ideas on or about realism in a novel. He says novel is not only a form of literature; it includes most form of writing. He says, “Now the novel is not so much a literary form but a whole literature in itself, with its wide boundaries, there is room for almost every kind of cotemporary writing. It is such a form that can include all the forms of literature.
5. There are two divisions of the social novel 1. The descriptive novel. 2. The formula Novel. The Descriptive Social novel or documentary deals with a particular society or community. He says, “If we want to know about life in a town, or in a university or on a merchant-ship, or in a patrol in Burma this is the book.” Further he adds, “Of all current kinds of novel, this kind at its best is apparently nearest to what I am calling the realist novel.” Formula Novel is a novel with “a particular pattern,  is abstracted from the sum off social experience and a society is created from this pattern.” As we find, the novels like “A Brave New World’ ‘Nineteen Eight Four’ are powerful social fiction in which a pattern taken from contemporary society is materialized in another time or place.
6. Like the social novel, we have two divisions of novel as (1) Personal Documentary Novel (2) Personal Formula Novel. Personal Formula Novel is a type of novel that deals with a certain kind of personal relationship. In order to distinguish personal documentary novel from a social documentary novel, he says in the social descript novel there is a lack of dimension but in a different direction.” Here the society is an aspect of the character. He emphasizes upon society and the people of that society through the discussion of novels-realist novel. William calls the personal formula novel as “the fiction of special pleading” He illustrate James Joyce’s’ – “Portrait of the Artist as a young Man’ to exemplify this kind of novel where the vision of the world is seen through one character. Human individuals are created from the sum of experiences.
Expected Questions
1. Who wrote the ‘Culture and Society’ (1958) and the ‘Long Revolution’ ( 1961)?
a. Lionel Trilling
b. Raymond Williams
c. James Joyce
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Raymond Williams (1921-1988), was a Welsh cultural critic, who was a major forerunner of contemporary Cultural Studies. Books such as Culture and Society 1780-1950 (1958) and The Long Revolution (1961) served to map out much that is now taken as the basic subject area of cultural studies, as well as doing much to shape the understanding of culture that informs those studies.
2. Which is the book by Raymond Williams is an exercise in literary history, but explores literature by relating books and authors to the broader historical and social development of ideas, and to culture as a ‘whole way of life’, ‘a mode of interpreting all our common experiences’?
a. The Long Revolution
b. Television: Technology and Cultural Form
c. Culture and Society
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: Culture is therefore not the culture of elite, but a culture that is embedded in everyday experience and activity. The culture that Williams is interested in is the culture that emerges as a complex criticism of industrial capitalism.
3. Which book by Raymond Williams is an analysis of culture as a way of life?
a. The Long Revolution
b. Television: Technology and Cultural Form
c. Culture and Society
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: The Long Revolution takes further the analysis of culture as a way of life. The revolution is that brought about by ‘the progress and interaction of democracy and industry, and by the extension of communications’ and the analysis concerns the way in which this affects all aspects of everyday life
4. Which is the key term introduced by Raymond Williams?
a. Culture
b. Culture and Society
c. Revolution
d. Structures of feeling
Ans: D
Explanation: A key term introduced by Williams is that of ‘structures of feeling’: the lived experience of a particular moment in society and in history.
5. From whom did Williams borrow the term, “overdetermination”?
a. James Joyce
b. Althusser
c. Lionel Trilling
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Williams borrowed from Althusser an important concept, “overdetermination”— the factors that determine a cultural practice. He defined “determination” as being “may be experienced individually but which are always social acts, indeed specific social formations”. He also suggests that social factors are internalised by individuals, and that there are multiple social forces that determine the nature and content of a cultural practice (what is termed as “overdetermination”).
16. Jacques Derrida ''Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourses of Human Sciences"
Snippets
1. Derrida’s Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences, is a paper he presented at the John Hopkins University in 1966 which launched post structuralism into literary theory.
2. In this essay, Derrida attempts to characterize certain features of the history of Western metaphysics; as issuing from the fundamental concepts of “structure” and “centre”.
3. It announces an “event” — in effect, a complex series of historical movements, whereby these central notions were challenged, which Derrida explicates using the work of Levi Strauss. The “event” or the ‘rupture” in the history of thought metaphorically refers to the series of deconstructions pioneered by thinkers like Nietzsche, Freud and Heidegger.
4. It suggests the ways in which current and future modes of thought the language might deploy and adapt Strauss’ insights in articulating their own relations to metaphysics.
5. According to Derrida, the concept of structure that has dominated Western science and philosophy has always referred to a “centre… or a point of presence, a fixed origin. The function of such a centre has been to organise the structure and to limit the free play of terms and concepts within it.” The centre, says Derrida, is “the point where any substitution or permutation of elements or terms is no longer possible.”
6. Analysing Strauss’ mythological studies, Derrida points out the weaknesses of the epistemological search for unity of a structure. Derrida criticizes structuralism as it becomes the critique of itself, and cites Strauss’ work The Raw and the Cooked where Strauss uses the concept of a “reference myth,” the Bororo myth, which is supposedly the centre of the structure of his mythology. However, Derrida observes that the Bororo myth deserves no more than any other myth the privilege of being a reference. Then, he surmises that the Bororo myth was favoured by Strauss not because of its special character but rather by its irregular position in the midst of a group of myths.
7. In his discussion of the origins of the critique of a centre, Derrida also notes that words are. but mere signifiers void of any real content. The sign does not have a presence. Language could no longer demand for a unifying centre; the centre becomes an impossibility not just because of the breadth of the reality that it tries to signify, but also because of language’s characteristic “freeplay”. Signs are polysemic and their signification is unlimited or undefined, as it is the inherent nature of language to defy pre-defined signification. These ideas introduced in Structure, Sign and Play became the founding principles of poststructuralism and postmodernism, and were later taken up by other theorists.
Expected Questions
1. Derrida’s Structure, Sign and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences, a paper he presented at the John Hopkins University in 1966, launched _____into literary theory.
a. Post structuralism
b. Structuralism
c. Deconstruction
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Post-structuralism is associated with the works of a series of mid-20th-century French and continental philosophers and critical theorists who came to international prominence in the 1960s and 1970s. The term is defined by its relationship to its predecessor, Structuralism, an intellectual movement developed in Europe from the early to mid-20th century which argues that human culture may be understood by means of a structure—modeled on language (i.e., Structural Linguistics)—that differs from concrete reality and from abstract ideas—a "third order" that mediates between the two.
2. According to Derrida which is a metaphysical contest?
a. Play
b. Structure
c. Sign
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: Sign is a metaphysical concept. Meaning is arbitrary. Meaning is never present in the sign, it is always postponed.
3. Who wrote the work, “Of Grammatology”?
a. Trilling
b. Raymond Williams
c. Derrida
d. None of the above
Ans: C
Explanation: Of Grammatology is a 1967 book by French philosopher Jacques Derrida that has been called a foundational text for deconstructive criticism. The book discusses writers such as Claude Lévi-Strauss, Ferdinand de Saussure, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Étienne Condillac, Louis Hjelmslev, Martin Heidegger, Edmund Husserl, Roman Jakobson, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, André Leroi-Gourhan, and William Warburton. The English translation by Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak was first published in 1976.
4. Which term did Derrida borrow from Levi Strauss?
a. Deconstruction
b. Post structuralism
c. Bricolage
d. None of these
Ans: C
Explanation: Derrida highlights Lévi-Strauss's use of the term bricolage, the activity of a bricoleur. "The bricoleur, says Lévi-Strauss, is someone who uses 'the means at hand,' that is, the instruments he finds at his disposition around him, those which are already there, which had not been especially conceived with an eye to the operation for which they are to be used and to which one tries by trial and error to adapt them, not hesitating to change them whenever it appears necessary."
5. Which book of Levi Strauss did Derrida quote in his essay?
a. The Raw and the Cooked
b. From Honey to Ashes
c. The Naked Man
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: In Derrida's words, "structural discourse on myths—mythological discourse—must itself be mythopomorphic". Lévi-Strauss explicitly describes a limit to totalization (and at the same time the endlessness of 'supplementarity'). Thus Lévi-Strauss, for Derrida, recognizes the structurality of mythical structure and gestures towards its freeplay.
17. Elaine Showalter "Towards a Feminist Poetics"
Snippets
1. Showalter is concerned by stereotypes of feminism that see feminist critics as being ‘obsessed with the phallus’ and ‘obsessed with destroying male artists’. Showalter wonders if such stereotypes emerge from the fact that feminism lacks a fully articulated theory.
2. One of the problems of the feminist critique is that it is male–orientated. If we study stereotypes of women, the sexism of male critics, and the limited roles women play in literary history, we are not learning what women have felt and experienced, but only what men thought women should be. The critique also has a tendency to naturalize women’s victimization by making it the inevitable and obsessive topic of discussion.
3. Showalter coined the term 'gynocritics' to describe literary criticism based in a feminine perspective. Gynocritics aims to understand the specificity of women’s writing not as a product of sexism but as a fundamental aspect of female reality. Its prime concern is to see ‘woman as producer of textual meaning, with the history themes, genres, and structures of literature by women’. Its ‘subjects include the psychodynamics of female creativity. It studies linguistics and the problem of a female language in literary text. It reviews the trajectory of the individual or collective female literary career. It proposes ‘to construct a female framework for the analysis of women’s literature, to develop new models based on women’s experience’. Its study ‘focuses on the newly visible world of female culture’; ‘hypotheses of a female sub–culture’; ‘the occupations, interactions, and consciousness of women’. It projects how ‘feminine values penetrate and undermine the masculine systems that contain them’.
4. Showalter then provides an exemplary feminist critique of Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge to demonstrate that “one of the problems of the feminist critique is that  it is male-oriented,” meaning that, in some sense, every feminist critique, even when criticizing patriarchy, is focused toward the male. As an alternative, Showalter presents gynocritics as a way “to construct a female framework for the analysis of women’s literature, to develop new models based on the study of female experience, rather than to adapt to male models and theories.”
5. From these experiences, Showalter then begins a rough sketch of some of the elements that have characterized women’s writing: awakening, suffering, unhappiness, and matrophobia, among others. She concludes with her classification of women’s writing into three phases that “establish[es] the continuity of the female tradition from decade to decade, rather than from Great Woman to Great Woman.” Thus, Showalter traces the history of women's literature, suggesting that it can be divided into three phases.
6. Showalter sees the first phases taking place from roughly 1840 to 1880; she calls this “the Feminine phase” and declares that it is characterized by “women [writing] in an effort to equal the intellectual achievements of the male culture… The distinguishing sign of this period is the male pseudonym… [which] exerts an irregular pressure on the narrative, affecting tone, diction, structure, and characterization.”
7. The second, Feminist phase follows from 1880 to 1920, wherein “women are historically enabled to reject the accommodating postures of femininity and to use literature to dramatize the ordeals of wronged womanhood.” This phase is characterized by “Amazon Utopias,” visions of perfect, female-led societies of the future. This phase was characterized by women’s writing that protested against male standards and values, and advocated women’s rights and values, including a demand for autonomy.
8. The Female phase (1920— ) is one of self-discovery. Showalter says, “women reject both imitation and protest—two forms of dependency—and turn instead to female experience as the source of an autonomous art, extending the feminist analysis of culture to the forms and techniques of literature”. Significantly, Showalter does not offer a characteristic sign or figure for the Female phase, suggesting a welcome diversity of experience that is too broad to be encompassed in a single image.
Expected Questions
1. Who is the author of the essay “Towards Feminist Poetics”?
a. Elaine Showalter
b. Margaret Fuller
c. Virginia Woolf
d. Simon de Beauvoir
Ans: A
Explanation: Showalter coined the term 'gynocritics' to describe literary criticism based in a feminine perspective. Probably the best description Showalter gives of gynocritics is in Towards a Feminist Poetics.
2. Elaine Showalter divided the history of women’s literature into -----
phases
a. Two
b. Three
c. Four
d. Five
Ans: B
Explanation: Showalter traces the history of women's literature, suggesting that it can be divided into three phases: The feminine phase, the feminist phase and the female phase.
3. Which among the following are the major phases of feminist criticism?
a. The feminine
b. The female
c. The feminist
d. All the above
Ans: D
Explanation: Answer as in question 2.
4. The feminist critique deals with women as ----
a. Reader
b. Writer
c. Daughters of patriarchy
d. None of the above
Ans: A
Explanation: She states that as a reader, woman studies the texts created by male writers.  She presents the belief that as a reader, female could change the established idea of a given text. This analysis undertaken by female is what she calls feminist critique.
5. Gyno-criticism deals with women as -----
a. Reader
b. Writer
c. Daughters of patriarchy
d. None of the above
Ans: B
Explanation: When feminist criticism is studied in concern to woman as writer, Showalter terms it as ‘Gynocriticism’. This is the concept that analyzes themes, genres and structures created by women. Woman, here, is considered as the producer of a literary text as well as its meaning.
18. Michel Foucault "What's an Author"
Snippets
1. Foucault’s "What Is an Author?" was originally delivered as a lecture in 1969, two years after the first English publication of Barthes’ famous essay "Death of the Author, 1967)". Although never explicitly stated, it’s quite obvious Foucault is directly responding to and criticizing Barthes’ thesis as evidenced by the following statement early in the essay: “A certain number of notions that are intended to replace the privileged position of the author actually seem to preserve that privilege and suppress the real meaning of his disappearance.”
2. Both Barthes and Foucault agree the "Author” is an unnatural, historical phenomenon that has unfortunately obtained mythological, heroic status. And both aim to contradict and complicate this status. However, their methods are drastically different. If "Death of the Author" actively attempts to kill the Author from the position of full-frontal attack, then "What is an Author?" casually submits to the inevitability of this death and opts instead to further problematize the foundational definitions underlying author and text.
3. After positing the classificatory problems associated with an author’s proper name, Foucault introduces the concept of the “author function” and describes its primary characteristics:
a. The "author function" is connected to the legal system. The law insists on holding individuals accountable for subversive or transgressive communications, hence the need for an “author.”
b. The "author function" varies according to field and discipline. Anonymity in scientific discourses, for example, is more acceptable than in literary discourses where an author is always demanded in order to situation meaning within the text.
c. The "author function" is carried out through "complex operations" and "is not defined by the spontaneous attribution of a discourse to its producer".
d. An "author" doesn't necessarily connote a specific individual; several narrators, selves and subjects confuse and complicate the designation between author and individual.
4. Foucault then makes a distinction of an "author function" and how it relates to an individual work versus an entire discourse. Authors who operate in the latter category are what he calls "founders of discursivity" and operate in the unique position of the "transdiscursive". These are authors like Freud and Marx who "...are unique in that they are not just the authors of their own works. They have produced something else: the possibilities and the rules for the formation of other texts."

5. By the end of "What is an Author?" it becomes clear that Foucault is interested in exhaustively complicating the notion of what it means to be an author through the articulation of “author” alongside its many historical and discursive formations rather than, like Barthes, singling out a generic “Author” to attack.
Expected Questions
1. “It is not enough, however, to repeat the empty affirmation that the author has disappeared. For the same reason, it is not enough to keep repeating that God and man have died a common death. Instead, we must locate the space left empty by the author’s disappearance, follow the distribution of gaps and breaches, and watch for the openings this disappearance uncovers”. Who said it?
a. Michel Baktin
b. Virginia Woolf
c. Foucault
d. None of the above.
Ans: C
Explanation: “Writing” for Foucault was like “Text” for Barthes and thus, writing possesses the “right to kill” the author, to be the author’s murderer. Writing cancels out signs of particular individuality so that, ironically, the sign of the writer is the singularity of absence. The writer has the role of the dead person involved in a game of writing.
2. Foucault pointed to exceptions to his assertion that the author is an ideological construct and made note of transdiscursive writers. Which among the following is a trasdiscursive writer?
a. Raymond Williams
b. Lionel Trilling
c. Leo Tolstoy
d. Karl Marx
Ans: D
Explanation: Foucault pointed to exceptions to his assertion that the author is an ideological construct and made note of transdiscursive writers, such as Karl Marx and Sigmund Freud and Ann Radcliffe, all of whom established paradigms or what Foucault called “discursive instaurations.” These are rare figures in the field of writing who created a genre that spawned writing in their particular area.
3. Whose seminal work is ‘The Death of the Author’?
a. Barthes
b. Foucault
c. Freud
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Foucault’s attack on the author is much more powerful than that of Barthes. Barthes kept within the boundaries of literary theory in his essay “The Death of the Author” and merely wanted to activate the reader. Foucault, however, seemed to view the author as being implicated in a system of thought that was mired in personification and personalization that got in the way of the preferred object of study: the discourse. Foucault wrote that the author was an “ideological” figure that is linked to a cult of personality.
4. Who wrote: Mental Illness and Psychology (1954) Madness and Civilization (1961) The Birth of the Clinic (1963) Death and the Labyrinth (1963) The Order of Things (1966) This is Not a Pipe (1968) The Archaeology of Knowledge (1969) Discipline and Punish (1975) The History of Sexuality (1976–1984)?
a. Foucault
b. Barthes
c. Lionel Trilling
d. Freud
Ans: A
Explanation: Paul-Michel Foucault (15 October 1926 – 25 June 1984), generally known as Michel Foucault was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, social theorist, and literary critic. Foucault's theories primarily address the relationship between power and knowledge, and how they are used as a form of social control through societal institutions. Though often cited as a post-structuralist and postmodernist, Foucault rejected these labels, preferring to present his thought as a critical history of modernity. His thought has influenced academics, especially those working in sociology, cultural studies, literary theory and critical theory. Activist groups have also found his theories compelling.
5. "What matter who is speaking, someone said, what matter who is speaking." From whom did Foucault borrow this notion?
a. Freud
b. Barthes
c. LionelTrilling
d. Samuel Beckett
Ans: D
Explanation: Samuel Barclay Beckett; (13 April 1906 – 22 December 1989) was an Irish avant-garde novelist, playwright, theatre director, and poet, who lived in Paris for most of his adult life and wrote in both English and French.
19. Jacques Lacan "The Insistence of the Letter of the Consciousness"
Snippets
1. Jaques Lacan is a French psychoanalyst whose works have had an extraordinary influence on many aspects of recent literary theories. He is one of the most influential theorists of the 1970’s and 1980’s. Lacan is influenced by Frued and Saussure. He interprets Freud by combining post-structuralist theories and psychoanalysis. Lacan provides a radical rereading and rewriting of the texts of Freud.
2. According to him, human psyche is divided into infinite number of psychic structures. Some of the psychic structures may be analogous and the psychic structures respond identically to identical psychic situations. It is called stimulus or impulse in classical psychology. Lacan’s importance is in his theory about acquisition of language.
3. Lacan divides his essay into three parts. They are “The meaning of the Letter”, “Letter in the unconscious”, and “ Being the Letter and the Other”. In the first section, Lacan treats the unconscious as a language. According to him, the unconscious is structured like a language. This does not mean that the unconscious is language but that the unconscious is like a language. The unconscious is considered as the seat of instincts, but this has to be rethought. Lacan also analyses the importance of the “Letter” in the unconscious. He says that “Letter” is the minimal unit of a language and speech is possible only by using these letters. Every individual makes use of language to make speech. Language has existed before the individual makes an entry into it. So it is said that the relationship of the unconscious with the letter has great significance.
4. Man is a slave of language. The communication takes place in the universal moment of which he takes birth. The culture and tradition can also be changed through language. The use of language is one of the peculiarity of human societies and this can be made clear by the trinary (Threefold conception of human condition) nature, society and culture. Lacan here shows how language and unconscious are related to each other.
5. Lacan formulates a formula of linguistic science: S/s signifier over the signified, “over” corresponding to the line separating the two levels. Lacan here questions the formulation S/s of the signifier and signified of Ferdinand de Saussure. This formula of sign was given by Saussure in his ‘Course de linguistique Generale’.
6. Lacan claims that signifier is more important than signified. Next he introduces the concept of Metonomy and Metaphor. Lacan calls sign a pyramid having two slopes: metanomy and metaphor. In metanomy one thing represents anything by means of the part standing for the whole. In metaphor one thing stands for the other or one word can be replaced by another word.
7. In the second section of the essay he changes the attention from the conscious self to the unconscious as “the kernel of our being”. Here Lacan rewrites Freud’s project. The structure of the language is used to interpret the dreams so that the structure of the unconscious and the structure of a dream can be related.
8. In the third section Lacan explains three phases in the evolution of human psyche. They are the Omlette stage, (Birth to approximately six months), the Mirror stage (six months to eighteen months) and the Symbolic stage (after 18 months up to death).
Expected Questions
1. In which age does the child think that it is an inseparable part of his mother?
a. Omlette stage
b. Mirror stage
c. Symbolic stage
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: In the omltte stage child thinks that it is an inseparable part of its mother. There is no distinction between self and the other (between child and mother) in this stage. It is a fluid state. The child has no individuality at this stage and its individuality depends on its mother and the child has no maturity. Lacan says that language is always absent at this stage.
2. In which stage based on Lacan, the child develops maturity?
a. Omlette stage
b. Mirror stage
c. Symbolic stage
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: In the mirror stage the child begins to develop maturity. Then the child realizes the authority, power and force of language and desires for its acquisition. He then begins to connect ideas to object, emotions and to situations. This shows the sign of maturity. Lacan says that in this period the child will see itself in a mirror. It will look at its reflection and then will realize itself as a unified being separate from its mother and the rest of the world. When the child sees an image in the mirror, it thinks that image is “Me” but “it is only an image not the child” and it will create an ego the thing that says “I”.
3. In which stage does the child connects ideas, emotions, situations and objects symbolically?
a. Symbolic stage
b. Mirror stage
c. Omlette stage
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: In third stage the child connects ideas, emotions, situations and objects symbolically. So images and objects are symbolically related to ideas. It is also a mature stage of human psyche. Lacan says that there is symbolic order for language. The symbolic order is Phallus. So language is a male-centred entity. This nature of language is called Phallocentrism. Lacan believes that men are more proficient than women in the use of language, for language is phallocentric. Women have lack of phallus and this consciousness retards her exercise of language.
4. Who analyses the unconscious through a linguistic methodology and considers the unconscious as structured system like language?
a. Freud
b. Foucault
c. Barthes
d. Lacan
Ans: D
Explanation: Lacan analyses the unconscious through a linguistic methodology and considers the unconscious as structured system like language. His procedure is to recast Freud’s key concept and mechanism into linguistic mode, viewing human mind not as preexistent but as constituted by language.
5. In which work of Lacan, would we get the central pillar of Lacan’s psychoanalytic theory?
a. The Ecritus
b. Feminine Sexuality
c. The Psychoses
d. "The Insistence of the Letter of the Consciousness"
Ans: D
Explanation: According to him, human psyche is divided into infinite number of psychic structures. Some of the psychic structures may be analogous and the psychic structures respond identically to identical psychic situations. It is called stimulus or impulse in classical psychology. Lacan’s importance is in his theory about acquisition of language.
20. Sharankumar Limbala "Dalit Literature and Aesthetics" (from Towards an Aesthetic of Dalit Literature )
Snippets
1. Savarna critics are of the opinion that Dalit Literature must be evaluated strictly as Litertaure as that is how the reader is going to perceive it. Criticism of Dalit texts must not give room to any extra literary traditions and it should be performed on the basis of universal theories and literary criterias. Limbale is opposed to this view of the Savarna critics as he feels that middle class criticism can never do justice to Dalit Literature which is the literature of the oppressed and the discriminated factions of the society.
2. A major debate which comes up while discussing Dalit literature is centered around the monopoly of Dalit Writers when it comes to penning Dalit Literature. The Savarna critics such as Kavi Anil and Vidyadhar Pundalik are of the opinion that Dalit Literature can be written be anyone through the power of imagination that can envision the suffering of the Dalits and give it literary expression. Limbale opines that it is impossible for a non-Dalit to write Dalit Literature as this Literature is the product of Dalit consciousness that is shaped by the lived experiences of Dalit, peppered by their pain, suffering and feeling of rebellion and anger. A non Dalit cannot possibly imagine all of this and be able to write an authentic account on the Dalits.
3. Since Dalit Literature is unique in its insistence of social upliftment and the realistic portrayal of Dalit experiences of pain and suffering along with voicing Dalit rebellion; as opposed to emphasis on beauty and pleasure, one must develop different artistic standards for of evaluation for such literature.
4. The crux of what is being said here lies in the fact that Dalit literature is not subject to fair and objective criticism. Criticism of any form of literature is necessary and in fact acts as a catalyst for improvement in the future output of that genre. But the criticism of Dalit literature is either adulatory or negative. In the case of being adulatory( falsely positive), the Dalit writers are praised more out of sympathy than actual admiration of their work. In the case of negative criticism, the Dalit writers are critiqued subjective to feelings of animosity and non-appreciation. Neutral criticism of Dalit literature never takes place and is one of the prime reasons behind its impeded critical growth.
5. The aesthetics of Dalit literature is also discussed by Limbale in the essay wherein it is suggested that Dalit literature being a revolutionary form of literature does not adhere to traditional principles of aesthetics.
6. Due to belonging to the lower caste, Dalit literature is often accused of arousing feelings of pain, suffering and anger in the reader whereas non-revolutionary literature arouses feelings such as happiness and delight. Overall Dalit literature is painted in a negative picture when it comes to aesthetic evaluation as it is accused of portraying only grief and sufferings.
Expected Questions
1. Who wrote the work, Akkarmashi?
a. Sharan Kumar Limbale
b. Valmiki
c. Janhavi Chadha
d. None of these
Ans: A
Explanation: Sharankumar Limbale is a Marathi language author, poet and literary critic. He has penned more than 40 books, but is best known for his autobiographical novel Akkarmashi.
2. Who comments that the traditional values of Satyam, Shivam and Sundaram, are not applicable in context of Dalit aesthetics as they are fabrications used to exploit common people?
a. Janhavi Chadha
b. Sharan Kumar Limbale
c. Mukarjee
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: Limbale comments that the traditional values of Satyam, Shivam and Sundaram, are not applicable in context of Dalit aesthetics as they are fabrications used to exploit common people. This aesthetic trinity only benefits the upper caste and has been formulated to suppress the lower ones.
3. The theme of Akkarmashi is _____
a. Prosperity of the society
b. The painful experience
c. Romance
d. None of these
Ans: B
Explanation: The title means being illegitimately born. In this text the narrator is the son of a Dalit woman who was lured by a rich landlord and later deserted. The text shows the painful experience of growing up in a society in which sexual exploitation and casteism are prevelant, tinged through and through with the Dalit consciousness of the writer.
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