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Formalisms
   (1) Russian Formalism       (2)   New Criticism
     Definition                  Definition
     Main Characteristics        Main Characteristics
     Main Figures                Main Figures
      ○ Victor Shklovsky
                                   ○ I. A. Richards
      ○ Mikhail M. Bakhtin
                                   ○ John Crowe
      ○ Roman Jakobson
                                       Ransom

          • Difference between Formalism and New
            Criticism
Russian Formalism
Definition of Russian Formalism:

   The Russian Formalists were a group of
    writers who flourished during the period
    of the Russian Revolution of 1917.
Russian Formalism
Main Characteristics:
 A new notion of form not as an envelope
  but viewed as “a complete thing, something
  concrete, dynamic, self-contained”
 A fundamental formalist distinction between
  poetic and practical language.
 The Formalists sought to isolate the study
  of literature from “secondary, incidental
  features” that might belong to philosophy,
  psychology, or history.
Russian Formalism
Victor Shklovsky (1893–1984)
   His essay “Art as Technique” (1917) was
    one of the central statements of
    formalist theory.
Mikhail M. Bakhtin (1895–
1975)
 Mikhail Bakhtin is best known for his
  radical philosophy of language, as well
  as his theory of the novel, underpinned
  by concepts such as “dialogism,”
  “polyphony,” and “carnival”.
 Bakhtin’s major work is The Dialogic
  Imagination: Four Essays (1930)
Roman Jakobson (1896–
1982)
 The work of Roman Jakobson occupies
  a central and seminal place in the
  development of formalism and
  structuralism.
 His famous work is “Linguistics and
  Poetics” (1958)
Roman Jakobson (1896–
1982)
   Jakobson urges that the poetic function
    of language must be situated among the
    other functions of language, which he
    schematizes as follows:
Roman Jakobson (1896–
1982)
   In any act of verbal communication, the
    “addresser” sends a message to the
    “addressee”; the message requires a
    “context” that is verbal or at least
    capable of being verbalized; a “contact”
    which is a physical channel or
    psychological connection between them;
    and a “code” that is shared by them.
Roman Jakobson (1896–
1982)
   Jakobson explains that each of these
    factors determines a different function of
    language, and that the verbal structure
    of any given message depends on the
    predominant function. In poetry itself,
    diverse genres employ the other verbal
    functions along with the poetic function.
    For example, epic poetry involves the
    referential function; lyric, the emotive.
Roman Jakobson (1896–
1982)
   Here is how Jakobson schematizes the
    various functions
New Criticism
Definition of Russian New Criticism:

 This formalist disposition became
  intensified in both the New Criticism and
  the Chicago School.
 The New Criticism originated in England
  during the 1920s in the work of T. S.
  Eliot and Ezra Pound, as well as in
  seminal studies by I. A. Richards and
  William Empson.
New Criticism
Main Characteristics:
 New Critics advocated a creative and
  imaginative criticism which gave primacy to
  the aesthetic qualities of literature over
  historical, psychological, and moral
  considerations.
 The real aim of criticism is “to define and
  enjoy the aesthetic or characteristic values
  of literature.”
Main Characteristics:
 Criticism’s proper province includes
  technical studies of poetry, metrics, tropes,
  and fictiveness.
 Literature and literary criticism should enjoy
  autonomy.
 Focusing on “the text itself ” or “the words
  on the page.”
New Criticism
I. A. Richards
 Richards’ Principles of Literary Criticism
  (1924) advanced literary critical notions
  such as irony, tension, and balance, as
  well as distinguishing between poetic
  and other uses of language.
 His Practical Criticism (1929
  emphasized the importance of
  “objective” and balanced close reading
  which was sensitive to the figurative
  language of literature.
John Crowe Ransom (1888–
1974)
 The seminal manifestos of the New
  Criticism had been proclaimed by
  Ransom, who published a series of
  essays entitled The New Criticism
  (1941)
 His arguments have often been
  abbreviated as focusing on “the text
  itself ” or “the words on the page.”
Difference between Formalism and New Criticism


 It should be said that the Russian
  Formalists’ emphasis on form and
  technique was different in nature from that
  of the later New Critics.
 The Formalists’ analyses were far more
  theoretical, seeking to understand the
  general nature of literature and literary
  devices, as well as the historical evolution
  of literary techniques; the New Critics were
  more concerned with the practice (rather
  than the theory) of close reading of
  individual texts.

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Formalism

  • 1.
  • 2. Formalisms  (1) Russian Formalism  (2) New Criticism  Definition  Definition  Main Characteristics  Main Characteristics  Main Figures  Main Figures ○ Victor Shklovsky ○ I. A. Richards ○ Mikhail M. Bakhtin ○ John Crowe ○ Roman Jakobson Ransom • Difference between Formalism and New Criticism
  • 4. Definition of Russian Formalism:  The Russian Formalists were a group of writers who flourished during the period of the Russian Revolution of 1917.
  • 6. Main Characteristics:  A new notion of form not as an envelope but viewed as “a complete thing, something concrete, dynamic, self-contained”  A fundamental formalist distinction between poetic and practical language.  The Formalists sought to isolate the study of literature from “secondary, incidental features” that might belong to philosophy, psychology, or history.
  • 8. Victor Shklovsky (1893–1984)  His essay “Art as Technique” (1917) was one of the central statements of formalist theory.
  • 9. Mikhail M. Bakhtin (1895– 1975)  Mikhail Bakhtin is best known for his radical philosophy of language, as well as his theory of the novel, underpinned by concepts such as “dialogism,” “polyphony,” and “carnival”.  Bakhtin’s major work is The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays (1930)
  • 10. Roman Jakobson (1896– 1982)  The work of Roman Jakobson occupies a central and seminal place in the development of formalism and structuralism.  His famous work is “Linguistics and Poetics” (1958)
  • 11. Roman Jakobson (1896– 1982)  Jakobson urges that the poetic function of language must be situated among the other functions of language, which he schematizes as follows:
  • 12. Roman Jakobson (1896– 1982)  In any act of verbal communication, the “addresser” sends a message to the “addressee”; the message requires a “context” that is verbal or at least capable of being verbalized; a “contact” which is a physical channel or psychological connection between them; and a “code” that is shared by them.
  • 13. Roman Jakobson (1896– 1982)  Jakobson explains that each of these factors determines a different function of language, and that the verbal structure of any given message depends on the predominant function. In poetry itself, diverse genres employ the other verbal functions along with the poetic function. For example, epic poetry involves the referential function; lyric, the emotive.
  • 14. Roman Jakobson (1896– 1982)  Here is how Jakobson schematizes the various functions
  • 16. Definition of Russian New Criticism:  This formalist disposition became intensified in both the New Criticism and the Chicago School.  The New Criticism originated in England during the 1920s in the work of T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound, as well as in seminal studies by I. A. Richards and William Empson.
  • 18. Main Characteristics:  New Critics advocated a creative and imaginative criticism which gave primacy to the aesthetic qualities of literature over historical, psychological, and moral considerations.  The real aim of criticism is “to define and enjoy the aesthetic or characteristic values of literature.”
  • 19. Main Characteristics:  Criticism’s proper province includes technical studies of poetry, metrics, tropes, and fictiveness.  Literature and literary criticism should enjoy autonomy.  Focusing on “the text itself ” or “the words on the page.”
  • 21. I. A. Richards  Richards’ Principles of Literary Criticism (1924) advanced literary critical notions such as irony, tension, and balance, as well as distinguishing between poetic and other uses of language.  His Practical Criticism (1929 emphasized the importance of “objective” and balanced close reading which was sensitive to the figurative language of literature.
  • 22. John Crowe Ransom (1888– 1974)  The seminal manifestos of the New Criticism had been proclaimed by Ransom, who published a series of essays entitled The New Criticism (1941)  His arguments have often been abbreviated as focusing on “the text itself ” or “the words on the page.”
  • 23.
  • 24. Difference between Formalism and New Criticism  It should be said that the Russian Formalists’ emphasis on form and technique was different in nature from that of the later New Critics.  The Formalists’ analyses were far more theoretical, seeking to understand the general nature of literature and literary devices, as well as the historical evolution of literary techniques; the New Critics were more concerned with the practice (rather than the theory) of close reading of individual texts.