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Review of Chapter 2

Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

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Page 1: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Review of Chapter 2

Page 2: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Literariness

• Story-like. Using literary devices.

• What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Page 3: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

What’s the question, again?

• What sort of object is it? What does it do? What purpose does it serve? (Depends on who you’re talking to.)

• What makes it different from non-literature? (What are its distinguishing features? See p. 19.)

Page 4: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Historical Variations

• Used to mean “Knowledge.”• Used to mean fine use of language --

persuasive, argumentative, etc.• Used to mean “imaginative writing.”• Could mean whatever a given society

decides it to be.• What does he mean when he says it’s

like “WEED”?

Page 5: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Reading as Literature

• Where do you find it?• Does it pose a problem, exercise

the imagination?• How about format? The way it

looks?• Detached from purposefulness?

Page 6: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Hyper-Protected Cooperative Principle

• We cooperate when we communicate.

• Literature is reviewed or Hyper-Protected.

• We’re willing to work harder when we read literature because we assume that it’s worth it. Somebody who knows has said so.

Page 7: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Nature of Literature

• Foregrounds Language• Integration of Language (156 S&S)• Literature as Fiction (We’ve got to

figure out the connection between it and life.)

• Lit. as Aesthetic Object (Purposefulness without a purpose.)

• Intertextual/self-reflexive (69 S&S, 594 Text, 727 Text.)

Page 8: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

The Turtle

• The turtle lives ‘twixt plated decks• Which practically conceal its sex• I think it clever of the turtle• In such a fix to be so furtile.

Page 9: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

variations

• Because he lives between two decks,

• It’s hard to tell a turtle’s gender.

• The turtle is a clever beast

• In such a plight to be so furtile.

• The turtle lives ‘twixt plated decks

• Which practically conceal its sex.

• I think it clever of the turtle

• In such a plight to be so fertile.

Page 10: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Functions of Literature

• to civilize the natives• organize and present values for

the masses• replace religion• explore universal human condition• build national cohesion

Page 11: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Some arguments

• P. 35-36 Which do you believe to be true? Does it lift us up or stir us up? Does it repress rebellion, encourage us all to be followers, or does it challenge us to constantly re-evaluate?

• P. 37 Does it isolate us, encourage passivity? Is it dangerous, encouraging us to question authority?

Page 12: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

God’s Will for You and Me

• Just to be tender, just to be true,• Just to be glad the whole day through,• Just to be merciful, just to be mild,• Just to be trustful as a child,• Just to be gentle and kind and sweet,• Just to be helpful with willing feet,• Just to be cheery when things go wrong,• Just to drive sadness away with a song,• Whether the hour is dark or bright,• Just to be loyal to God and right,• Just to believe that God knows best,• Just in his promises ever to rest --• Just to let love be our daily key,

• That is God’s promise to you and me.

Page 13: Review of Chapter 2. Literariness Story-like. Using literary devices. What does he have to say about using this as a guide to definition?

Pied Beauty

• Glory be to God for dappled things--• For skies of couple-color as a brinded cow;• For rose-moles all in stipple upon trout that swim;• Fresh-firecoal chestnut-falls; finches’ wings;• Landscape plotted and pieced -- fold, fallow and plow;• And all trades, their gear and tackle and trim.

• All things counter, original, spare, strange;• Whatever is fickle, freckled (who knows how?)• With swift, slow; sweet, sour; adazzle, dim;• He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change:• Praise him.