New Criticism
New Criticism
New Criticism
writers to focus critical attention on literature itself. Like RUSSIAN FORMALISM, following Boris Eikhenbaum and Victor Shklovskii, the New Critics developed speculative positions on techniques of reading that provide a vital complement to the literary and artistic emergence of modernism. In the specific context of Anglo-American literary study, however, the New Criticism appears, in retrospect, as part of an epochal project to create the curricular and pedagogical institutions by which the study of literature moved from the genteel cultivation of taste to an emerging professional academic discipline. In this respect, the New Criticism exhibits many similarities to STRUCTURALISM, just as it had an impact on the development of the French nouvelle critique and later, structuralist literary criticism as exemplified in the early work of ROLAND BARTHES. In general, the far-reaching influence of New Criticism stems less from theoretical or programmatic coherence than from the practical (and pedagogical) appeal of a characteristic way of reading and its pervasive influence on the academic culture of Anglophone literary study. The theoretical differences among the critics commonly described as New Critics (not necessarily by themselves)- I. A. RICHARDS, WILLIAM EMPSON, F. R. LEAVIS, KENNETH BURKE, John Crowe Ransom, Allen Tate, YVOR WINTERS, Cleanth Brooks, R. P.BLACKMUR, W. K. Wimsatt, Jr., REN WELLEK-are sometimes so great as to leave little apparent ground for agreement. The New Critics tended to be eclectic on matters of theory, concentrating instead on what Blackmur called the critic's "job of work." For most of the New Critics that job was PRACTICAL CRITICISM or "close reading," in which the poem or literary text is treated as a self-sufficient verbal artifact. In this general orientation, the literary text as such was generally viewed as a privileged site for shaping and disseminating cultural values held to be essential attribute of the aesthetic specificity of poetry. By careful attention to language, the text is presumed to be a unique source of meaning and value, sharply distinguished from other texts or other uses of language (particularly scientific language). Accordingly, the meaning of the poem is not conveyed by any prose paraphrase and is valued as the source of an experience (for the reader) available in no other way. For this among other reasons, opponents of the New Critics have frequently charged that they ignore history, ideology, politics, philosophy, or other factors that shape literary experience. While such charges are not entirely fair, they arise because New Criticism in practice came to focus almost exclusively on problems of interpreting individual texts. Partly for this reason, New Criticism can still be considered a movement, beginning after World War I with the critical work of modern poets and critics, especially T. S. ELIOT, Richards, and somewhat later John Crowe Ransom, culminating some 30 years later in the work of explicitly academic critics, such as Wellek, Wimsatt, and Brooks. The institutional dimension of the New Criticism is particularly clear in this respect, in the creation of
From second edition of The Johns Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism, ed. Michael Groden, Martin Kreiswirth, & Imre Szeman, (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), pp. 691-698