Thomas Schmitz's book provides a clear, lively and intelligent guide through most major areas of modern literary theory and their application to the study of classical literature. It neatly identifies key theoretical texts and thinkers, and provides telling examples which lend colour and life to the impressive range of concepts discussed. He is refreshingly honest about his own prejudices and difficulties, while remaining even-handed and balanced in discussion; his presentation of the problems and objections faced by each theory is especially helpful. This excellent book has something to offer for every serious contemporary student of classical literature.
This book provides students and scholars of classical literature with a practical guide to modern literary theory and criticism. Using a clear and concise approach, it navigates readers through various theoretical approaches, including Russian Formalism, structuralism, deconstruction, gender studies, and New Historicism.
Acknowledgments
Acknowledgments for the English Translation
Introduction
What Is, and To What End Do We Study, Literary Theory?
Literary Theory and Classics
Objections Raised against Literary Theory
How to Use This Book
Introductions to Literary Theory
1. Russian Formalism 17
The Question of Literariness
Roman Jakobson's Model of Linguistic Communication
Poetic Language as Defamiliarization
Further Reading
2. Structuralism
The Founder of Structuralism: Ferdinand de Saussure
Saussure's Definition of the Linguistic Sign
The Meaning of Differences
Structuralism and Subject
Structural Anthropology
Is Structuralist Interpretation Possible?
Structuralist Definitions of Literary Genres
Further Reading
3. Narratology
Vladimir Propp's Analysis of the Folk Tale
Greimas's Actantial Theory of Narrative
Roland Barthes and the Study of Narrative Texts
Structuralist Plot-Analysis: Gérard Genette
Irene de Jong's Narratological Analysis of the Homeric Epics
Further Reading
4. Mikhail Bakhtin
Bakhtin's Life and the Problem of His Writings
Dialogism and the Novel
The Carnivalization of Literature
Menippean Satire and Ancient Carnivalesque Literature
Further Reading
5. Intertextuality
Leading the Way: Julia Kristeva
Further Developments of Intertextuality
Gérard Genette's Model of Hypertextuality
Intertextuality in Virgil
Further Reading
6. Reader-Response Criticism
Empirical Reception Studies
Aesthetics of Reception
American Reader-Response Criticism
Wheeler's Analysis of Ovid's Metamorphoses
Further Reading
7. Orality - Literacy
Oral Cultures: The Theses of Goody and Watt
What Does "Orality" Mean?
Oral Poetry
The Homeric Epics as a Test Case
Further Reading
8. Deconstruction
The Foundations: Derrida's Criticism of Logocentrism
Deconstruction in America
Objections to Deconstruction
The Role of the Author
Stanley Fish's Model of "Interpretive Communities"
The Responsibility of the Interpreter
Deconstruction's Merits and Demerits
Deconstruction in Antiquity? Socrates und Protagoras
Further Reading
9. Michel Foucault and Discourse Analysis
The Power of Discourse
Objections to Foucault's Analysis of Discourse
Foucault and Antiquity
The Debate about Foucault's Interpretation of Ancient Sexuality
Further Reading
10. New Historicism
New Historicism and Deconstruction
New Historicism and Michel Foucault
Objections to New Historicism
New Historicism and Antiquity
Further Reading
11. Feminist Approaches/Gender Studies
The Feminist Movement and Definitions of "Woman"
Feminism in Literary Criticism
French Feminism
Pragmatic Feminism in Literary Criticism
From Images of Women to Gender Studies
Queer Theory
Gender Studies and Attic Drama
Further Reading
12. Psychoanalytic Approaches
Interpreting Dreams, Interpreting Literature
Three Attempts at Psychoanalytic Interpretation
Language and the Unconscious: Jacques Lacan
Further Reading
Conclusions?
Whither Now?
Additional Notes
References and Bibliography
Index