John Crowe Ransom is known as the father of New Criticism. He coined this term in 1941. This approach to literature is based on the principle of 'Art for Art's Sake." It focuses on the text (Formalist), known as "close reading" (particularly) and ignores other parameters like social context, readerRead more
John Crowe Ransom is known as the father of New Criticism. He coined this term in 1941. This approach to literature is based on the principle of ‘Art for Art’s Sake.”
It focuses on the text (Formalist), known as “close reading” (particularly) and ignores other parameters like social context, reader and author in order to find how a work of literature functions as a self-contained, self-referential aesthetic object.
See less
Structuralism is a school of literary criticism that holds that different literary works have underlying structures that are similar, and that these structures can be identified and analyzed as if they were (parts of) machines. Read a detailed article on Structuralism
Structuralism is a school of literary criticism that holds that different literary works have underlying structures that are similar, and that these structures can be identified and analyzed as if they were (parts of) machines.
Read a detailed article on Structuralism
See less