tigermilk said:
Asking 'is literary criticism bullshit?' is like asking 'are black people criminals?' or 'are men rapists?' You can't treat all literary criticism (or black people/men for that matter) as a homogoneus whole.
Thank you, that's really a big part of the point I've been trying to make. While I don't deny that there is some BS in the field of literary criticism, I can't really say it represents the practice as a whole. It's a bit like using bad science (IE flawed or biased studies) to show that, say, Biology is nothing more than BS.
dathwampeer said:
But since you're talking about the type of criticism academics indulge in... I think university classes where all you do is analyze poems (or something) are insane. There's also all those cases where the analysis done by those teaching the material don't correspond with the original intentions of the author. ex. Farenheit 451 was supposedly misinterpreted alot.
Basically, I just think they take what they do way too seriously.
Again, why is it so bad if an interpretation doesn't correspond with the original intention of the author? Is art nothing more than a puzzle we need to figure out? What happens when the author's original intent is no longer meaningful to modern readers? Should we ignore the text even if has other possible lessons for us? Should we ignore a new, possibly more enlightening interpretation of a text simply because it's anachronistic?
Penguinness said:
I wouldn't like to single out literature, but writing assignments in general feel slightly BS-y to me. I always preferred things with straight answers, and not just talk. What it comes down to for me is criteria, things with clear and concise criteria are often things that can have straight answers. Writing assignments feel too random.. I can get 90% in one written assignment and 56% in another. It's also down to the markers too, I've had feedback which says x part of the assignment is good, but is marked the lowest when I get it back.
I agree with that somewhat, but if you are regularly getting random scores (especially if they range from 56% to 90%) I think it might be more of an issue with how you present your argument than the subjective nature of evaluating a paper.
Jordi said:
I think you have your problem right here. People (including me) don't really know what "literary criticism" is about but they think they do because they think they took similar courses in high school.
I don't want to be a dick here, but why did you post this question to a forum like the Escapist's if you believe that high school English is not good enough grounds to give a judgment on this topic? Doesn't that basically exclude everybody who is not currently taking these courses at an academic level? Because if it does, it just seems like you would have a horribly biased group of people.
Well let me put it this way: what students do in a HS English class is about as similar to what literary critics do as what students do in a HS science class resembles what actual scientists do. IE, not very.
In a HS science class, you are essentially required to memorize a lot of facts. This is
not what actual scientists do in their day to day work, but it is needed in order to have a base understanding of the subject. You might perform experiments in class, but they are hardly ever included on a test (especially a standardized one), and they are rarely evaluated in the same way that an actual scientist would be evaluated by their peers.
HS English is the same way. The way standardized tests are evaluated often goes completely against what most English professors consider to be good academic criticism. Now, if the experts of a subject say something goes against what they consider to be good practice in their field, is it fair to judge the field based on those bad practices? It's a bit like evaluating the validity of science based on papers supporting intelligent design. Even if a good amount of people think that's what science is really about, it's not.
Jordi said:
Unfortunately, I still don't have a really good idea on what (you think) literary criticism is. It seems to be about finding meaning in texts. It apparently doesn't matter what the original author thinks the meaning is, so there is no right or wrong. Apparently that meaning can be just about anything, as long as you support it with arguments. And I think that that is what people are referring to as bullshitting. If you are creative enough, you can pretty much take any (long enough) text and point out all of the Marxist/feminist/capitalist/misogynist undertones in it as long as you are creative enough. As such, performing a literary criticism seems like a good exercise in analysis, creativity, writing and argumentation, but it seems that the final product is not that valuable to anyone except maybe if it is entertaining to read (but you don't need academic literary criticism for that).
Well, here's my view of literary criticism:
It is about finding meaning in text. It doesn't matter what the original author thinks the meaning is, but that doesn't mean there is no right or wrong. You aren't trying to find out what the author is saying, you are trying to find out what the text is saying and how that message applies to our current world.
The meaning can be about anything, but it can't just be supported by arguments; it has to be supported by evidence from the text. Conversely, when people do a Marxist/feminist/etc reading of a text, they aren't necessarily trying to show that the text was intended to be Marxist or feminist; they are trying to show how a Marxist or feminist might view the text. The purpose of that kind of analysis is to get people thinking about the text again within the context of a more modern perspective.
Jordi said:
And I think that that is what people are referring to as bullshitting.
As I see it there are two definitions of bullshitting: 1) making an argument that you don't personally believe in 2) making an argument that is not supported by actual evidence.
If we're talking about the latter, than good academic criticism is definitely not BS.
If we're talking about the former, then it is possible for bs to be considered good academic criticism, but it would also be possible for bs to be considered good science.
Lets imagine I don't personally believe in gravity, but I devised and performed a successful experiment about gravity anyway. Do my personal beliefs have any weight on the validity of my experiment? Would the scientific community disregard my findings simply because I wasn't genuinely invested in my work? Of course not, and literary criticism is no different. I think people get disillusioned when something that they consider to be ridiculous gets praised by a teacher or academic, but they forget that criticism isn't about writing
your interpretation so much as it is about writing
an interpretation. As long as a paper is well supported it will be accepted, same as a scientific experiment.
Jordi said:
As such, performing a literary criticism seems like a good exercise in analysis, creativity, writing and argumentation, but it seems that the final product is not that valuable to anyone except maybe if it is entertaining to read (but you don't need academic literary criticism for that).
Unlike science, the value of any sort of criticism is fairly subjective. We are talking about art, after all.
However, I think that's the reason why it's so important that there be more than one interpretation for every text. If we did say that the author's intended meaning was the only correct interpretation, art would only be valuable to the small amount of people who agree with that reading. Instead, we have a number of equally supportable ideas, which in turn can help a larger amount of people see value in a work.
To put it another way, which of the following would you find more valuable: learning what the original author's message was (even if that message is totally trite or useless in today's world), or finding an interpretation of the text gave you some sort of personal revelation/changed your way of thinking? Which do you think is more likely to make the work more valuable to you?
Father Time said:
Don't know about all literary criticism, but most of my English papers were about BSing things from the books, that I didn't necessarily believe.
I remember in European Literature class I was VERY tempted to tell my professor "Listen if you want us to write a paper about how books from the medieval ages are still relevant, you shouldn't expect more than a lot of BSing."
Again, it doesn't matter whether or not you personally believe what's in the paper, it only matters how well you supported it.
Like I mentioned above, even in science it's possible to make breakthroughs without believing your work. It's your methodology that counts, not your opinions.
FalloutJack said:
Really, you can read into a film, or a book, or a game...but sometimes it's just about a guy doing his thing and not..."Well, this over here is Freudian and that is a comment on Marxian class-struggle".
Like I mentioned in another post above, people that make those types of interpretations aren't saying that "Shakespeare was a Marxist" or some such nonsense. They are explaining how a Marxist might interpret Shakespeare.