Difference between revisions of "2007-08 BM1: Session 3"
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<small>Back to [[2007-08 BM1 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature, Part 1]]</small> | <small>Back to [[2007-08 BM1 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature, Part 1]]</small> | ||
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+ | *Though we can assume that all periods and languages produced works we may read as literature - the bodies of works we put together as the different national literatures are a comparatively new invention. | ||
+ | *What we understand as "literary materials" did not form the same context before the 1750s. | ||
+ | *The discussion of "literature" grew from the 15th into the 18th century as a discussion of scientific works | ||
+ | *Those who discussed the sciences popularised their debate by turning it into a debate of poetical and fictional works between 1750 and 1850. | ||
+ | *Alternative fields of materials - "poetry" and the "belles lettres" and modes of their evaluation were declared inappropriate and delegitimised by our modern discussion of literary works. | ||
+ | *If you do written work on the university level | ||
+ | :*Be careful to assume that contexts and traditions you find explained in histories of literature were also known to those who wrote and consumed these literary works before the 1750s. | ||
+ | :*Do assume that entirely different contexts existed wherever we see something as literature of the past - contexts such as that of | ||
+ | ::*the "belles lettres" - the market of fashionable books read all over Europe (a context existing between 1600-1800), | ||
+ | ::*poetry - the field of works in verse including prose comedy and (between 1600 and 1800) also the opera, | ||
+ | ::*histories - both true and fictional, serious and scandalous including romances and novels before the 1750s. |
Revision as of 16:56, 3 September 2007
Back to 2007-08 BM1 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature, Part 1
- Though we can assume that all periods and languages produced works we may read as literature - the bodies of works we put together as the different national literatures are a comparatively new invention.
- What we understand as "literary materials" did not form the same context before the 1750s.
- The discussion of "literature" grew from the 15th into the 18th century as a discussion of scientific works
- Those who discussed the sciences popularised their debate by turning it into a debate of poetical and fictional works between 1750 and 1850.
- Alternative fields of materials - "poetry" and the "belles lettres" and modes of their evaluation were declared inappropriate and delegitimised by our modern discussion of literary works.
- If you do written work on the university level
- Be careful to assume that contexts and traditions you find explained in histories of literature were also known to those who wrote and consumed these literary works before the 1750s.
- Do assume that entirely different contexts existed wherever we see something as literature of the past - contexts such as that of
- the "belles lettres" - the market of fashionable books read all over Europe (a context existing between 1600-1800),
- poetry - the field of works in verse including prose comedy and (between 1600 and 1800) also the opera,
- histories - both true and fictional, serious and scandalous including romances and novels before the 1750s.