CRITICISM
Etymologically the word criticism is derived from the Greek
word meaning judgment and hence criticism is exercise of judgment and literary
criticism is the exercise of judgment on works of literature. Criticism is the
play of the mind on a work of literature, and its function is to examine its
excellencies and defects and finally to evaluate its artistic worth.
PRINCIPLES OF CRITICISM
1. First is the principle of Truth. Truth is the final test of merit in literature, for a work which does not correspond with the facts of life or with the universal and fundamental beliefs of mankind, cannot be regarded as great whatever its technical excellence may be.
2. The second essential principle by which permanent worth of an author is to be assessed is the principle of symmetry. This principle implies right selection and arrangement of material. “ It implies that the writer should select certain aspect of reality.
3. The third principle is the principle of idealization. This principle implies not only that certain aspect of reality should be selected for artistic treatment but also that the selection so made should exclude such matters as affects unpleasantly the aesthetic consciousness of the reader.
QUALIFICATIONS OF A GOOD CRITIC
1. A
critic must be a man of rare organic sensibility.
2. Secondly
he must be a man widely read not only in literature of his own language, but in
that of as many languages as possible.
3. He
must have proper training and technical skill in the different branches of
literature.
4. He
must rise above all prejudices.
5. The critic must have imaginative sympathy. He
must be able to put himself in the place of the writer.
6.The
critic must have a sound knowledge of human psychology.
BRANCHES OF CRITICISM
So, the theories of art can be
defined with regard to their focus and concentration on any of the afore-said
variables. Thus a mimetic theory of art sees the work of art as reflecting the
universe like a mirror. Aristotle who defined art as imitation in his Poetics
is the prime example of this theory. This mimetic criticism regards literature
as imitating or reflecting life and therefore emphasizes the truth and accuracy
of its representation.
A pragmatic theory of art sees the
work as a means to an end, to teach or instruct or aesthetic pleasure. There
should be a pragmatic purpose to teach by delighting. The focus is changed to
the work’s effect on an audience. It judges literature according to the
successful achievement of this assumed aim. The assumption of most of the
Neo-classical criticism from Sir. Philip Sydney’s Apology for poetry (1545) to
Dr. Johnson’s many critical studies at the end of the 18th Century
is that literature serves a pragmatic purpose.
Expressive theories centre on the
artist. Wordsworth’s definition of the poetry as the spontaneous overflow of
powerful feelings is typical and nearly all Romantic and 19th
Century criticism generally regards art as primarily concerned with expressing
the poet’s feelings or psyche. It examines text as an expression of the writer’s
feelings, imagination and personality. It tends to judge the work by its
sincerity or the extent to which it has successfully revealed the author’s
state of mind. Romantic Critics such as Coleridge and Wordsworth were
expressive critics in this sense.
There are various types of
criticism that have flourished from time to time they are
- LEGISLATIVE CRITICISM
- JUDICIAL CRITICISM
- THEORETICAL CRITICISM
- EVALUATIVE CRITICISM
- HISTORICAL CRITICISM HISTORICAL CRITICISM
- BIOGRAPHICAL CRITICISM
- COMPARATIVE CRITICISM DESCRIPTIVE CRITICISM
- IMPRESSIONISTIC CRITICISM
- TEXUAL OR ONTOLOGICAL CRITICISM
- PSYCHOLOGICAL CRITICISM
- SOCIOLOGICAL MARXIST CRITICISM
- ARCHETYPAL CRITICISM.
DESCRIPTIVE CRITICISM
Descriptive criticism is the
analysis of existing literary works of their aims, methods and effects. It is
by far the most popular of the critical modes, and a large bulk of English
criticism is of this type. Its most powerful exponents have been the poets
themselves, who have analysed their own creations with a view to explaining
their own aims and methods. As George Watson points out, “descriptive criticism
begins in self-justification with poets discussing their own works and
defending them against hostile attacks as Dryden has done in his innumerable
prefaces”. His Essay on Dramatic Poesy provides the earliest extent example of
descriptive criticism. While the legislative critic says,, “this is how a play
should be written,” and a theoretical critic like Aristotle says, “this is the
nature of Tragedy in general” a descriptive critic, like Dryden, simply says,
“this is how I have tried to write my play and why” “Descriptive criticism is always about some particular
text whether of the critic’s own or of another, and the critic, instead of
laying down general rules or theorizing in general terms, analyses the work in
hand, traces the influence4s that have given rise to it, and then discusses it
critically item by item.
NEO-CLASSICAL CRITICISM: ITS TWO
PHASES
At the beginning of this era
stands John Dryden and at the end of it there is Dr. Samuel Johnson. In its
first phase, i.e., during the Restoration age (1660-1700) which is presided
over by John Dryden, Neo-classicism is the liberal and moderate; in its second
phase, i.e. during first six or seven decades of the 18th century it
becomes more and more narrow, slavish, and stringent. Pope, Addison and then
Dr. Johnson are the leading critics of this second phase. George Shereburne in
his Literary History of England defines Neo-classicism as,
“a veneration for the Roman classics,
thought, and way of life”
JOHN DRYDEN. (1631—1700)
John Dryden was a versatile and
voluminous writer who left no branch of literature untouched and produced works
of outstanding merit in each field. He was a great poet and a great dramatist.
He was a great poet and a great dramatist. He was also a great prose-writer,
and is regarded as the founder of modern prose style. He was also an original
and discriminating critic, so much so that Dr. Johnson called him, “The
father of English criticism,” and critic after critic has agreed with
this estimate. However, the only formal work of criticism that he has left
behind him is his Essay on Dramatic Poesy, a work which is the unofficial
manifesto of his critical creed, and an important landmark in the history of
literary criticism in England .
JOSEPH ADDISON (1672—1719)
Criticism in the early 18th
century does not differ substantially from Restoration criticism, except that
Neo-classicism grows more severe and stringent, and there is an expansion and
diffusion of the critical temper. “It accepts and consolidates the revolution
that Dryden made, and advances it cautiously on many fronts.” It makes ample
use of the critical tradition that it had inherited from Dryden.
The critical out put of Addison belongs to three different periods;
1. His
early Criticism.
2. The Prose works of his Middle Period.
3. And the Essays which he contributed to the Tattler and the Spectator; the best ofAddison ’s criticism is contained in the Spectator papers.
2. The Prose works of his Middle Period.
3. And the Essays which he contributed to the Tattler and the Spectator; the best of
ALEXANDER POPE (1688—1744)
Alexander Pope was a much greater
poet than critic, though he has written at length on criticism. His chief
critical works are:
1. Essay
on Criticism.
2. Imitations
of the Epistles of Horace to Augustus.
3. His
letters.
4. His
preface to his edition of Shakespeare’s Plays.
DR. SAMUEL JOHNSON
Bosker in his admirable book
Literary Criticism in the Age of Johnson emphasizes the dual trends in the
criticism of the later half of the 18th century; one is the
persistence of the neo-classic trends, and the other is the rise of
romanticism. The Neo-classical school is still dominant, but it is being
undermined by the rising romanticism of the age.
Dr. Johnson was a voluminous
writer and critical remarks are scattered all over his works. But his claim as
a literary critic chiefly rests upon.
1. Preface
to the Dictionary of the English Language.
2. Preface
to Shakespeare.
3. Lives
of the Poets.
4. Essays
and Articles contributed from time to time to the Rambler, a periodical founded
and edited by the Doctor himself.
S.T COLERIDGE. (1772—1834)
The awakening of sensibility is
the most radical change that comes over the English Literary scene about the
middle of the 18th century. Sensibility primarily means the power of
generation or perception, but this meaning has become over laid with another,
that of quickness and acuteness f apprehension or feeling, which in turn was
extended, during the 18th century, to mean the capacity for refined
emotion, sensitiveness generally in the face of external nature, and the
readiness to feel for the poor and the suffering. The neo-classical dogma is
felt to be too cramping and narrow, and writers turn to a freer mode of self
expression.
Coleridge was a great poet, but he
is also a great critic. He is one of the greatest of poet critics that England has
ever produced. Stray’ remarks on literature and literary theory are scattered
all over his prose works as , The Friend, Table Talks; Letters; Aids to
Reflection; Confessions of an Inquiring Spirit: Anima Poetae; and Sibylline
Leaves. But the bulk of his literary criticism, all that I most worthwhile in
it is contained in his; Biographia Literaria and Lectures on Shakespeare and
Other poets.
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH. N(1770—1850)
Wordsworth is one of the greatest
poets of England ,
one to whom Matthew Arnold assigns a place next only to Shakespeare and Milton.
He was primarily a poet, and not a critic. He has left behind him no
comprehensive and systematic treatise on literary criticism. His criticism
consists of Advertisement to the Lyrical Ballads, Preface to the Lyrical Ballads1800,
Preface to the Lyrical ballads 1802. the preface was constantly revised for the
subsequent editions of the lyrical Ballads. For the 1815 edition, the poet
wrote a new preface and the older one was added as an Appendix. Wordsworth’s
critical works also include his notes to “The Thorn”, and other poems as well
as critical remarks of great significance scattered all up and down his
correspondence.
MATHEW ARNOLD (1822—1888)
Queen Victoria
came to the throne in 1837 and she ruled England till her death in 1901. the
beginning of her reign coincided with far reaching economic, social, scientific
and literary changes which not only transformed English social life, but also
had far reaching impact on literature and literary criticism. With the memory
of the horrors of the French Revolution still fresh in their minds, the
Victorians had a passion for law and order. They wanted progress but a steady,
ordered progress, healthy evolution, and not a bloody revolution.
Mathew Arnold the greatest name
among the Victorian critics is a poet turned critic. He started his literary
career by writing poetry. It was only at the age of thirty-one in 1853 that he
published his first piece of criticism as preface to the poems, and then for
the rest of his life for full thirty-five years, he hardly wrote anything but
criticism.
His works on criticism consists of
The Preface to the Poems 1853, On Translating Homer 1856, Essay in Criticism,
On the study of Celtic Literature.
T.S ELIOT (1888—1965)
Twentieth
century literary criticism in England
offers a bewildering variety of critical theory and practice. New discoveries
in psychology, anthropology, sociology, economics, etc. having brought about a
revolution in critical methods with the result that modern criticism is quite
different from criticism in the 19th century. Critics like
I.A.Richards, T.S.Eliot, F.R. Leavis, William Empson, have provided entirely
new interpretations of old writers, and presented them in an entirely new light.
The full significance of their achievement is yet to be realized.
I need examples
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