Practical criticism underlies everything students of English literature do. It is a way of reading the text closely, but with a grasp of the larger issues involved. This book is a practical, step-by-step guide which shows the student how to gain a sense of what a poem or passage of prose or drama is about, how to analyse it and how to build a successful essay. Easy to read Practical criticism underlies everything students of English literature do.
It is a way of reading the text closely, but with a grasp of the larger issues involved. This book is a practical, step-by-step guide which shows the student how to gain a sense of what a poem or passage of prose or drama is about, how to analyse it and how to build a successful essay. Easy to read and uncluttered by technical vocabulary, it will prove an invaluable resource for any student. Wow, a non-fiction book review for once. This book was written by lecturers from my university, John Peck and Martin Coyle. Actually, I think John Peck has retired now, but Martin Coyle is still going strong. I just had him for a first year module, so I know he's brilliant.
In his lectures he talks about the ideas they set forth in this book a lot, so it does make a good companion to the course. It's also generally a good book for getting to grips with practical criticism generally. I feel it's p Wow, a non-fiction book review for once. Final report sample. This book was written by lecturers from my university, John Peck and Martin Coyle. Actually, I think John Peck has retired now, but Martin Coyle is still going strong.
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I just had him for a first year module, so I know he's brilliant. In his lectures he talks about the ideas they set forth in this book a lot, so it does make a good companion to the course. It's also generally a good book for getting to grips with practical criticism generally. I feel it's particularly strong on analysis of poetry, although I've also had the benefit of Martin Coyle's lectures on that front.
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The book offers tips both on how to get hold of a poem and what to do once you have a hold of it, and describes simple ways to write a good, clear, concise essay. There are also examples of essays written by real first year students, with explanations of their strengths and weaknesses. I also have How To Study A Poet by John Peck, which seems to have much the same kind of advice in it, so I don't think you need to read both. So far, I'd favour Practical Criticism of the two, because of the range of advice it offers, but I haven't finished How To Study A Poet, yet. This is an excellent 'how to' guide to Practical Criticism, covering - at diminishing length, to avoid repetition - poetry, prose and drama.
The authors introduce a method, whch is to identify some central tension in the text and use the commentary to develop that thesis. They illustrate this approach with a number of exemplar readings.
Along the way there are some striking observations, and I feel I emerge from the book a better reader myself. The two main traps in a Practical Criticism paper a This is an excellent 'how to' guide to Practical Criticism, covering - at diminishing length, to avoid repetition - poetry, prose and drama. The authors introduce a method, whch is to identify some central tension in the text and use the commentary to develop that thesis. They illustrate this approach with a number of exemplar readings. Along the way there are some striking observations, and I feel I emerge from the book a better reader myself.
The two main traps in a Practical Criticism paper are to spend ages simply summarising the content, or conversely to ignore it altogether and produce a pointlesss list of observations of rhyme scheme and local details ('there is alliteration on line 3'). The approach espoused here will help to combat both vices and enable students - and teachers - to see a text as a whole, and then relate details to that whole in a meaningful and useful way. In the best of all possible worlds one might want something less like a formula, more free-wheeling perhaps.
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But students are taught methodical approaches to problems ine very other subject, so why not English as well? The mystique around literary texts is distinctly unhelpful to those having to write on unseens in timed conditions, and I welcome this book's sensible dispelling of mystery! To be read alongside the same authors' 'Literary Terms and Criticism'.
Alternative Title: Ivor Armstrong Richards I.A. Richards, in full Ivor Armstrong Richards, (born Feb. 26, 1893, Sandbach, Cheshire, Eng.—died Sept. 7, 1979, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire), English critic, poet, and teacher who was highly influential in developing a new way of reading poetry that led to the New Criticism and that also influenced some forms of reader-response criticism. Richards was educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and was a lecturer in English and moral sciences there from 1922 to 1929.
In that period he wrote three of his most influential books: The Meaning of Meaning (1923; with C.K. Ogden), a pioneer work on semantics; and Principles of Literary (100 of 374 words).
Ivor Armstrong Richards – poet, dramatist, speculative philosopher, psychologist and semanticist, is among the first of the 20th century critics to bring to English criticism a scientific precision and objectivity. He is often referred to as the ‘critical consciousness’ of the modern age. New Criticism and the whole of modern poetics derive their strength and inspiration from the seminal writings of Richards such as Principles of Literary Criticism, Practical Criticism, Coleridge on Imagination, The Foundation of Aesthetics (with C.K.Ogden and James Wood) and The Meaning of Meaning (with Ogden). Together with T.S.Eliot, Richards was instrumental in steering Anglo-American criticism along a new path of scientific enquiry and observation.
Practical Criticism Richard’s influence rests primarily on his Practical Criticism (1929) which is based on his experiments conducted in Cambridge in which he distributed poems, stripped of all evidence of authorship and period, to his pupils and asked them to comment on them. He analyses factors responsible for misreading of poems. Even a “reputable scholar” is vulnerable to these problems. 1) First is the difficulty of making out the plain sense of poetry. A large proportion of average-to-good readers of poetry simply fail to understand it. They fail to make out its prose sense, its plain, overt meaning. They misapprehend its feeling, its tone, and its intention.
2) Parallel to the difficulties of interpreting the meaning are the difficulties of sensuous apprehension. Words have a movement and may have a rhythm even when read silently. Many a reader of poetry cannot naturally perceive this. 3) There are difficulties presented by imagery, principally visual imagery, in poetic reading. Images aroused in one mind may not be similar to the ones stirred by the same line of poetry in another, and both may have nothing to do with the images that existed in the poet’s mind. 4) Then comes the persuasive influence of mnemonic irrelevancies ie, the intrusion of private and personal associations.
5) Another is the critical trap called stock responses, based on privately established judgments. These happen when a poem seems to involve views and emotions already fully prepared in the reader’s mind. 6) Sentimentality, ie, excessive emotions 7) inhibition, ie hardness of heart are also perils to understanding poetry.
Poetry
8) Doctrinal adhesions present another troublesome problem. The views and beliefs about the world contained in poetry could become a fertile source of confusion and erratic judgment.
9) Technical presuppositions too can pose a difficulty. When something has once been done in a certain fashion we tend to expect similar things to be done in the future in the same fashion, and are disappointed or do not recognise them if they are done differently. This is to judge poetry from outside by technical details. We put means before ends. 10 ) Finally, general critical preconceptions resulting from theories about its nature and value come between the reader and the poem. The objective of Practical Criticism was to encourage students to concentrate on ‘the words on the page’, rather than rely on preconceived or received beliefs about a text.
Richards concludes that the critical reading of poetry is an arduous discipline. “The lesson of all criticism is that we have nothing to rely upon in making our choices but ourselves.” The lesson of good poetry, when we have understood it, lies in the degree to which we can order ourselves. Through close analysis of poems and by responding to the emotion and meaning in them the students were to achieve what Richards called an ‘organized response.’ From this stems Richard’s ‘psychologism’ which is concerned not with the poem per se but with the responses to it. Poetry and Synaesthesia. In The Principles of Literary Criticism (1924), Richards establishes the nature and value of poetry. According to him, the science that unearths the secrets of literature is psychology. He first examines the working of the human mind itself to find out a psychological theory of value.
He describes the human mind as a system of ‘impulses’, which may be defined as ‘attitudes’ or reactions motivated in us by ‘stimuli’, that culminate in an act. These impulses are conflicting instincts and desires and wants—or ‘appetencies’ as Richards calls them, as opposed to ‘aversions’ — in the human mind. They pull in different directions and cause uneasiness to the human mind which looks to achieve order or poise through the satisfaction of appetencies. The mind experiences a state of poise only when these emotions organize to follow a common course. But with each new experience, the whole system is disturbed and the human mind has to readjust the impulses in a new way to achieve the desired system or poise. To achieve this poise, some impulses are satisfied and some give way to others and are frustrated. The ideal state will be when all the impulses are fully satisfied, but since this is rarely possible, the next best state is when the maximum number of impulses are satisfied and the minimum are frustrated.
The value of art or poetry – and by poetry Richards means all imaginative literature – is that it enables the mind to achieve this poise or system more quickly and completely than it could do otherwise. In art there is a resolution and balancing of impulses.
Poetry is a representation of this uniquely ordered state of mind in which the impulses respond to a stimulus in such a manner that the mind has a life’s experience. The poet records this happy play of impulses on a particular occasion, though much that goes into the making of a poem is unconsciously done. It is to partake of this experience that the true reader reads poetry. Good poetry arouses the same experience in the reader too. Thus, poetry becomes a means by which we can gain emotional balance, mental equilibrium, peace and rest. Poetry organizes our impulses and gives our mind a certain order, renders us happy and makes our minds healthy.
What is true of the individual is also true of society. A society in which arts are freely cultivated exhibits better mental and emotional tranquillity than the societies in which arts are not valued. This moral value of art proceeds from the working of the human mind rather than from any ethical base.
Art or poetry is valuable in that it integrates our activities, resolves our mental conflicts and tensions and leads us to a liberated state. Richards calls this harmonized state, this balancing of conflicting impulses “synaesthesis”. It is the simultaneous harmonious experience of diverse sensations and impulses resulting in a fusion of opposites or unification of differences. Synaesthesia is a condition in which one experiences equilibrium of harmonious elements. In the experience of synaesthesis, there is a sense of detachment that is conducive to the formation of a completely coordinated personality.
Two Uses of Language Richards views the poem as a response to a stimulus, which is located in the reader. But this subjectivism leads him to the conclusion that all poetic language is ambiguous, plurisignant, open to different meanings and so on. In this context, as David Daiches says, Richards investigates what imaginative literature is, how it employs language, how its use of language differs from the scientific use of language and what is its special function and value. Richards in his “Principles of Literary Criticism” expounded a theory of language, and distinguished between the two uses of language – the referential or scientific, and the emotive. A statement may be used for the sake of reference, which may be verified as true or false. This is the scientific use of language.
But it may also be used for the sake of the effects in emotions and attitudes produced by the reference. This is the emotive or poetic use of language. The poet uses words emotively for the purpose of evoking emotions and attitudes considered valuable by him. For instance, the word ‘fire’ has only one definite scientific reference to a fact in the real world. But when poetry uses it in a phrase such as ‘heart on fire’ the word evokes an emotion – that of excitement. While science makes statements, poetry makes pseudo-statements that cannot be empirically tested and proved true or false.
A statement is justified by its truth or its correspondence with the fact it points to. On the other hand, the pseudo statement of poetry is justified in its effect of releasing or organizing our impulses or attitudes. Richards says, “The statements in poetry are there as a means to manipulation and expression of feelings and attitudes.” Poetry communicates feelings and emotions. Hence, poetic truth is different from scientific truth. It is a matter of emotional belief rather than intellectual belief. Poetry cannot be expected to provide us with knowledge, nor is there any intellectual doctrine in poetry.
Poetry speaks not to the mind but to the impulses. Its speech, literal or figurative, logical or illogical is faithful to its experience as long as it evokes a similar experience in the reader. Thus, a poem, as Richards defines it, is a class of experiences ‘composed of all experiences, occasioned by the words’ which are similar to ‘the original experience of the poet.’ Four Kinds of Meaning In Practical Criticism, The Meaning of Meaning and The Philosophy of Rhetoric, Richards advocates a close textual and verbal analysis of poetry. Language is made up of words and hence the study of words is of paramount importance in the understanding of a work of art. Words, according to Richards, communicate four kinds of meaning.
Or, the total meaning of a word is a combination of four contributory aspects —Sense, Feeling, Tone, and Intention. Poetry communicates through the interplay of these four types of meanings. Sense is that which is communicated by the plain literal meanings of the words. When the writer makes an utterance, he directs his hearers’ attention upon some state of affairs, some items for their thought and consideration. Feeling refers to the feelings of the writer or speaker about these items, about the state of affairs he is referring to. He has an attitude towards it, some special bias, or interest, some personal flavour or colouring of it, and he uses language to express these feelings.
In poetry, sense and feeling have a mutual dependence. “The sound of a word has much to do with the feeling it evokes.” Tone means the attitude of the writer towards his readers.
The writer or the speaker chooses and arranges the words differently as his audience varies, depending on his relation to them. Besides these, the speaker’s intention or aim, conscious or unconscious, should also be taken into account. Intention refers to the effect one tries to produce, which modifies one’s expression. It controls the emphasis and shapes the arrangement.
‘It may govern the stress laid upon points in an argument. It controls the ‘plot’ in the larger sense of the word.’ The understanding of all these aspects is part of the whole business of apprehending the meaning of poetry. Generally sense predominates in the scientific language and feeling in the poetic language. The figurative language used by poets conveys emotions effectively and forcefully. Words also acquire a rich associative value in different contexts. The meaning of words is also determined by rhythm and metre.
Just as the eye reading print unconsciously expects the spelling to be as usual, the mind after reading a line or two of verse begins to anticipate the flow of poetry. This anticipation becomes precise when there is regularity of sound created through rhythm and metre. For the purpose of communication, the use of metaphoric language is all important. “A metaphor is a shift, a carrying over of a word from its normal use to a new use”. Metaphors may be of two kinds: (I) sense-metaphors, and (2) emotive-metaphors. In a sense-metaphor the shift is due to a similarity between the original object and the new one. In an emotive metaphor the shift is due to a similarity between the feelings the new situation and the normal situation arouse.
The same word in different contexts may be a sense-metaphor or an emotive one. Mementodiscpatcher0 9e exercise. Metaphor, says Richards, is a method by which the writer can crowd into the poem much more than would be possible otherwise. The metaphorical meaning arises from the inter-relations of sense, tone, feeling and intention. “A metaphor is a point at which many different influences may cross or unite. Hence its dangers in prose discussions and its treacherousness for careless readers of poetry, but hence, at the same time, its peculiar quasi-magical sway in the hands of a master.” In poetry, I.A. Richards sums up, statements turn out to be the indirect expressions of Feeling, Tone and Intention.
To sum up in the words of George Watson, “Richards is simply the most influential theorist of the century, as Eliot is the most influential of descriptive critics.” Richards’ claim to have pioneered Anglo- American New Criticism of the thirties and forties is unassailable. He provided the theoretical foundations on which the technique of verbal analysis was built. He turned criticism into a science, and considered knowledge of psychology necessary for literary criticism. He inspired a host of followers, the most notable of whom is William Empson.
With him, textual analysis came to dominate academic criticism. This anti-historical criticism became New Criticism. Undoubtedly, Richards is one of its primary founding fathers.
They flee from me, that sometime did me seek With naked foot, stalking in my chamber. I have seen them gentle, tame, and meek, That now are wild, and do not remember That sometime they put themselves in danger, To take bread at my hand; and now they range, Busily seeking with a continual change. Thanked be fortune it hath been otherwise Twenty times better; but once, in special, In thin array, after a pleasant guise, When her loose gown from her shoulders did fall, And she me caught in her arms long and small, Therwith all sweetly did me kiss, And softly said: 'Dear heart, how like you this?' It was no dream: I lay broad waking. But all is turned, thorough my gentleness, Into a strange fashion of forsaking; And I have leave to go of her goodness, And she also to use newfangleness. But since that I so kindly am served: I would fain know what she hath deserved. The Poem You should now read the poem carefully.
You might like to record your comments on a separate piece of paper. When you feel that you have thought about it enough, go on to the next page. You will be given a critical commentary on the poem to which you can compare your own. If you like, you can hear the poem read aloud by Professor Dame Gillian Beer (you may need to save the file to your computer if it doesn't play in your browser): (1MB, 1 m 28 s, 96kbps, mono) You might like to think about the following:.
What is the poem's?. What is the poem's and is it the same throughout the poem?.
Are there any words in it which you do not understand, or which are used in an unusual way?. Do you feel that you understand what it is about? Tip: in practical criticism it helps to confront your uncertainties rather than to try to ignore them. They will not go away, and if you do confront them directly it may lead you to a fuller understanding of a poem's effects.
During the early decades of this century, the British critic A. Richards conducted a famous series of experiments in reading that he reported in his book Practical Criticism. Interested primarily in the ways poems affect a reader, he regularly gave his students a selection of anonymous poems and asked for a commentary on each. The exercise led him to propose a step-by-step process for interpreting poetry, which formed the basis for the discipline we now call 'close reading.' Begin this lesson by explaining to your students that they will recreate the Richards experiment, using the unfiltered poetry available on the Internet as their raw material.
Activity 1. Browse and Collect Have small groups of students browse the website to select 2 to 4 poems for commentary. Ask students: What draws you to a poem? As they browse, students should be aware of what factors affect their choices.
I A Richards Practical Criticism
The title of a collection of poetry, the author's name and dates, the size of the collection, all have a subjective influence on the kind of poetry we read and enjoy. Have students reflect on these influences as they browse the site and keep a journal of their selection process. Once students have completed their selections, but before they begin their commentaries on each poem, compare notes as a class on the factors that led them to their choices. Comment and Criticize Have students comment on one or two of the poems they have selected, following an adaptation of the procedure outlined by I. Richards:. First, they should write a paraphrase of the poem, expressing in their own words its plain prose meaning.
Second, they should comment on the imagery used in the poem. Have them explain how the imagery enhances the poem by adding emotional color or associations to the plain sense. Have them note also whether the poet's use of imagery is consistent. Third, have students describe the overall tone or mood of the poem, the 'feeling' that it communicates to them as readers. A poem leaves an impression, and while this impression may be complex (who could summarize the 'feeling' imparted by Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan'?), it will always be distinct for the alert reader. Finally, have students express an opinion about the poem: is it good or bad poetry, and why? This may be the most popular part of the exercise, since we generally present students with poems that have been certified 'good' by generations of venerated readers and rarely give them an opportunity to pass an unbiased judgment of their own.
Martin Coyle
Discuss When they have completed their commentaries, have students discuss in small groups what they learned from the experience. Which stage in the process was most difficult? Which was most revealing?
How did the exercise make them more self-aware as readers of poetry? How did it sharpen their understanding of how poems work? Divide the class into small groups for comparison of their individual commentaries. Have each group report on these discussions. What are two or three qualities in each poem that they liked? Have students make a list of qualities and share them with the class.
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