2. Formalism Is?
All about essential
information to interpretation
of a piece of literature that
must be found within the
work.
3. Define how such elements
work together with the
text’s content to shape
its effects upon readers.
Objective
4. Types of Formalist’s
Questions
What is the genre, or form, of the piece of literature?
Who is speaking in the piece of literature?
What is the argument, thesis, or subject of the piece of
literature?
What is the structure of the piece of literature?
How does the piece of literature make use of setting?
Are there key statements or conflicts in the piece of literature
that appear central to its meaning?
What feelings are evoked as the reader interprets the text?
How does the make use of literary devices (i.e. imagery,
setting, characters, metaphors, similes, etc.)?
What meaning can be developed from the text?
5. Examples in Literature
“The Banking Concept of Education”, by Paulo Freire
Metaphor:
“Narration (with the teacher as a narrator) leads the
students to memorize mechanically the narrated
content. Worse yet, it turns them into ‘containers,’ into
‘receptacles’ to be ‘filled’ by the teacher” (Freire 260)
“To Kill a Mockingbird”, by Harper Lee
Point of View: “I received a letter and a snapshot from
him” (Lee 116)
6. BIOGRAPHICAL CRITICISM
• Biographical criticism is a form of Literary criticism
which analyzes a writer's biography to show the
relationship between the author's life and their works of
literature
• The goal of a biographical criticism is understanding why
the author wrote what he or she wrote
7. Three Benefits of Biographical
Criticism:
• Facts about an author’s experience can help a reader
decide how to interpret a text.
• A reader can better appreciate a text by knowing a
writer’s struggles or difficulties in creating that text.
• A reader can understand a writer’s preoccupation by
studying the way they apply and modify their own life
experiences in their works.
8. Important Questions for
Biographical Criticism
Understanding the Author:
What facts about the author’s life suggest ideas in the work? Did
anything that happened to the author effect his or her themes or
choice of subject matter?
What was/is the author’s world view? Which of the author’s
beliefs seem reflected in their story?
What commentary on the story did the author make? Does it
point to ideas in the story?
Understanding the Author’s World:
What world view was typical of the author’s time? What aspects
of this world view seem prevalent in this story or character? Does
the author seem to accept or rebel against this world view?
How did people respond to the author’s works and life?
What ideas did people find in the author’s works and life?
9. Example of an Author’s Life Experiences Shaping His Writing
Tim O’Brien is the author of The Things They Carried
Facts about O’Brien:
Born October 1, 1946
Grew up in Minnesota
Political views were against the Vietnam War
Drafted into Army in 1968
Served from 1968 to 1970 as an infantry foot soldier
Sketch of the Book
The story takes place in Vietnam.
It details the burdens that infantry soldiers carried, both physically and mentally.
In an extended novel released in 1990, O’Brien gives the narrator his own name.
The story is fictional even though it sounds true (verisimilitude).
The story paints a devastating picture of the Vietnam War.
10. Checklist of Questions
What influences – persons, ideas, movements, events –
evident in the writer’s life does the work reflect?
To what extent are the events described in the work a
direct transfer of what happened in the author’s actual
life?
What modifications of the actual events has the writer
made in the literary work? For what possible purposes?
Why might the writer have altered his or her actual
experience in the literary work?
What are the effects of the differences between actual
events and their literary transformation in the work?
What has the author revealed in the work about his or
her characteristic modes of thought, perceptions, or
emotion? What place does the work have in the author’s
literary development and career?