1993 HYPERTEXT DATABASE: NEW CRITICISM
These materials were created by students back in 1993 as part of an early experiment with hypertext. They were designed to serve as a kind of online reference tool, an electronic database, that would provide information to students who weren't taking English 60A. The authors of these materials were Chris Abele, Liz Cronmiller, Allison DeZurik, Josh Hudson, Diana Marinos, Matt Ogborn, and Tamara Pellicier. If they ever visit this site, I hope they'll drop me a line.
Table of Contents
New Criticism is an approach to literature which was
developed by a group of American critics, most of whom taught at
southern universities during the years following the first World
War. The New Critics wanted to avoid impressionistic criticism
New Criticism is distinctly formalist in character
The aesthetic qualities praised by the New Critics were
largely inherited from the critical writings of Samuel Taylor
Coleridge.
In The Well-Wrought Urn (1947), Cleanth Brooks integrates
these considerations into the New Critical approach.
Although the New Critics do not assert that the meaning of a
poem is inconsequential, they reject approaches which view the
poem as an attempt at representing the "real world." They
justify the avoidance of discussion of a poem's content through
the doctrine of the "Heresy of Paraphrase," which is also
described in The Well-Wrought Urn. Brooks asserts that the
meaning of a poem is complex and precise, and that any attempt to
paraphrase it inevitably distorts or reduces it. Thus, any
attempt to say what a poem means is heretical, because it is an
insult to the integrity of the complex structure of meaning
within the work.
The intentional and affective fallacies
In The Verbal Icon (1954), William Wimsatt and Monroe
Beardsley describe two other fallacies which are encountered in
the study of literature
The "Intentional Fallacy" is the mistake of attempting to
understand the author's intentions when interpreting a literary
work. Such an approach is fallacious because the meaning of a
work should be contained solely within the work itself, and
attempts to understand the author's intention violate the
autonomy of the work.
The "Affective Fallacy" is the mistake of equating a work
with its emotional effects upon an audience. The new critics
believed that a text should not have to be understood relative to
the responses of its readers; its merit (and meaning) must be
inherent.
The New Critics' preference for poetry
The New Critics privileged poetry over other forms of
literary expression because the saw the poem as the purest
exemplification of the literary values which they upheld.
However, the techniques of close reading and structural analysis
of texts have also been applied to fiction, drama, and other
literary forms. These techniques remain the dominant critical
approach in many modern literature courses.
Possible critiques and responses
Because New Criticism is such a rigid and structured program
for the study of literature, it is open to criticism on many
fronts. First, in its insistence on excluding external evidence,
New Criticism disqualifies many possibly fruitful perspectives
for understanding texts, such as historicism, psychoanalysis, and
Marxism.
However, defenders of New Criticism might remind us that
this approach is meant to deal with the poem on its own terms.
While New Criticism may not offer us a wide range of perspectives
on texts, it does attempt to deal with the text as a work of
literary art and nothing else.
revised October 3, 1997
mail to Tim Spurgin