Literary Criticism – Handwritten Notes
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LITERARY CRITICISM β HANDWRITTEN NOTES (UGC NET Focus)
π 1. What is Literary Criticism?
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The disciplined analysis, interpretation, and evaluation of literature.
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Helps us understand how texts work, why they matter, and what meanings they generate.
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Moves from author β text β reader β culture, depending on school of criticism.
π 2. Classical Criticism
Aristotle (384β322 BCE)
Key Work: Poetics
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Mimesis: Literature imitates life, but elevates it.
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Plot (Mythos): The soul of tragedy.
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Catharsis: Purging of pity & fear.
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Hamartia: Tragic flaw.
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Parts of Tragedy: Plot, Character, Thought, Diction, Melody, Spectacle.
Plato
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Art = Imitation of imitation β Distrust of poets.
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Wanted poets banned from the Republic.
π 3. Medieval Criticism
St. Augustine
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Literature as moral instruction.
Dante
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Introduces allegory as interpretative method.
π 4. Renaissance Criticism
Philip Sidney β An Apology for Poetry
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Defence of poetry
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Poet = βMakerβ
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Poetry delights + teaches (Horatian blend)
Sir Francis Bacon
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Essays as moral, reflective criticism.
π 5. Neoclassical Criticism
John Dryden
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Comparative criticism β Shakespeare vs Ben Jonson.
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Favors Nature, decorum, and rules.
Alexander Pope
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Essay on Criticism:
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βA little learning is a dangerous thing.β
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Emphasizes correctness, wit, clarity.
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Samuel Johnson
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Practical criticism
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Shakespeare praised for realism.
π 6. Romantic Criticism
Wordsworth β Preface to Lyrical Ballads
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Poetry = βSpontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.β
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Language of common man.
Coleridge β Biographia Literaria
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Primary & secondary imagination.
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Fancy vs imagination.
Shelley
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Poet = βUnacknowledged legislators of the world.β
π 7. Victorian Criticism
Matthew Arnold
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Touchstone method
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Literature as a substitute for religion
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Critical spirit, moral seriousness
π 8. Modern Criticism
T.S. Eliot
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Tradition and the Individual Talent
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Impersonal theory of poetry
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Poet must escape emotion
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Objective correlative
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Hamlet β Artistic failure
I.A. Richards (New Criticism father)
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Close reading
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Four kinds of meaning
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Practical criticism
Cleanth Brooks
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Paradox, irony, unity of text.
π 9. Psychoanalytic Criticism
Freud
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Oedipus complex, dreams, repression.
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Literature = Expression of unconscious.
Jung
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Archetypes β collective unconscious.
π 10. Marxist Criticism
Karl Marx
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Base & superstructure
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Class struggle.
Raymond Williams / Terry Eagleton
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Literature = cultural production.
π 11. Feminist Criticism
Simone de Beauvoir
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βOne is not born, but becomes, a woman.β
Elaine Showalter
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Gynocriticism β womenβs writing tradition.
Gilbert & Gubar
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The Madwoman in the Attic
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Angel vs monster paradigm.
π 12. Structuralism & Post-Structuralism
Saussure
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Sign = signifier + signified
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Meaning is relational.
Roland Barthes
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Death of the Author
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Reader = producer of meaning.
Derrida
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Deconstruction
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DiffΓ©rance
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Text = unstable, infinite meanings.
π 13. Reader-Response Theory
Wolfgang Iser
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Implied reader
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Gaps in text.
Stanley Fish
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Interpretive communities.
π 14. New Historicism
Stephen Greenblatt
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Power, discourse, culture
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Literature = historical energy.
π 15. Postcolonial Criticism
Frantz Fanon
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Psychological effects of colonisation.
Edward Said β Orientalism
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Westβs construction of the East.
Homi Bhabha
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Hybridity, mimicry, ambivalence.
π 16. Cultural Studies
Stuart Hall
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Representation
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Encoding/decoding model.
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Course Content
Literary Criticism
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