How you respond to a text depends on how you look at a text
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If you see a text as . . .  | 
you might respond to it with . . .  | 
that answers the question . . .  | 
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a source   of information | 
a summary | 
what does   it say? | 
| 
a work of   art | 
an   aesthetic analysis | 
why does   it please/entertain/move readers? | 
| 
an act of   persuasion | 
an   ideological analysis  | 
what values does it affirm and   challenge? | 
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an   observation about life | 
a personal   essay | 
how can I   relate this to my own life? | 
| 
a model | 
a similar   text  | 
can I write something like   that? | 
Definitions
Aesthetics. Theory of the taste and the perception of the beautiful in nature and art.
Ideology. A scheme of ideas (about what is moral, normal rational, just, beautiful, etc.), especially one that is held implicitly.
Implicit. Implied, inferred; Not stated openly or directly.
Ideology. A scheme of ideas (about what is moral, normal rational, just, beautiful, etc.), especially one that is held implicitly.
Implicit. Implied, inferred; Not stated openly or directly.
 
In school, I usually see a text as an assignment - a task I have to complete - so I respond to it by writing whatever it is I think is required to get the grade I want. For me that's 89.5 - an A but with the least effort possible. I know some people who are looking for 69.5, just enough for credit. And that's the way I have seen and responded to literature. To think about the way seeing it that way more or less determines how I respond is an interesting idea. Let's see, I can also see it as stupid BS, as a waste of my time, as the Emperor's New Clothes,... I once heard a teacher say that when I think a work of literature is stupid I should look in the mirror. But am I supposed to trust that all literature is great? Maybe some of it is stupid!
ReplyDeleteNot Dr. Benton
Two dangers to avoid when approaching literature:
ReplyDelete1) Uncritical veneration (based on the assumption that all literature is great and only stupid people do not appreciate this fact);
2) Casual dismissal (based on the assumption that if your first reaction to a literary text is negative, no further engagement will be worth your time or energy).
Two things to remember when approaching literature:
ReplyDelete1) Appreciation of literary texts is often an acquired taste;
2) You don’t have to enjoy a text or agree with its values in order to benefit from studying it.