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Kinds of Literature. An Introduction to the Theory of Genres and Modes PDF

369 Pages·1982·9.607 MB·English
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• 1n s 0 it ~rature An 1 troductiont o · . Theoryof enresa nd Modes : 1 - t . . as a1r i Li'! i ~ ~ ' ~ In this important book, the first general ' ... an essential work of literary theory.' study of genre theory, Alastair Fowler Arthur Pollard, British Book News investigates the meaning of genres and how ' ... a steady dividend of unhackneyed modern literature relates to the traditional learning and unexpected points of view ... a categories. for some time now it has been willingness to continue the discussion among taken for granted that the old order of living writers where all is still fluid and historical kinds has irrevocably gone; in the uncertain ... these definitions and main critics have preferred to talk about distinctions lead us to see supposedly genres-or 'modes' -in a broad, unhistorical familiar stretches of literary history in a fresh way. This seldom makes for better reading of light ... a generous familiarity with literature literature; and, dealing with a very small of all ages and a lively regard for its variety.' repertoire of modes, it has tended to narrow Graham Hough, London Review of Books the literary canon. ' ... logically argued and solidly based on Kinds of Literature springs from the the evidence of literature itself ... his own conviction that it is time to recover a sense readings of literature throughout the book of the variety of literary forms. To this end, illuminate the texts in ways which ... wholly and grounding his study in a wealth of justify his approach through genre.' examples, Professor fowler reconstructs Maurice Evans, Times Higher Education genre theory and opens it to historical Supplement considerations. He takes into account variation over the years and across national ' ... balanced, intelligent, and useful ... a borders, and traces the actual mechanisms welcome delight.' Susanne Woods, Spenser of literary change. News fetter ISBN 0-19-812857-6 Oxford OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Kinds of Literature Kinds of Literature An Introductiont o the Theoryo f Genresa nd Modes ALASTAIR FOWLER CLARENDON PRESS • OXFORD Oxford UniversityP ress,G reat ClarendonS treet,O "':forodx z 6DP Oxford New York Athens Auck!and Bangkok BogotaB ombqy BuenosA ires Calcutta Cape Town Dar es Salaam Delhi FlorenceH ong Kong Istanbul Karachi Kua!aL umpur Madras Madrid Mefbourne Mexico City Nairobi Paris Singapore Taipei Tolryo Toronto Warsaw and associatecdo mpanieisn Berlin Ibadan Oxfordi s a tradem ark efO xford UniversityP ress © 1982 by Alastair Fow!er hrst published1 982 First issueda s a paperback1 985 Reprinted1 9117,1 997 All rightsr eseroedN. o part eft hisp ubficationm qy be reproduced, storedi n a retrievarly stem,o r transmittedi,n a,ryf orm or by any means, withoutt hep ,ior pem,iJ-sioinn wtitinge fO xford UniversityP ress. Wzthint he UK, exceptionas re a!!owedin respecet fa ,ryf air dealingfort he purposeq f researcho r privates tudy, or ctiticismo r reviewa, s permitted undert he CopyrightD, esignsandP atentsA ct, 1988, or in the caseo ( reprographriecp roductioinn accordancwei th the termse ft he ficences issuedb y the CopyrighLt icensingA genry.E nquiriesc oncerning reproductioonu tsidet heset ermsa nd in otherc ountriessh ouldb e sent to the Rights Dpartmenf, Oxford UniversityP ress, af the addressa bov, This book is sofd subjectt o the conditionth at it shall not, by way efI radeo r othenviseb, e !ent, re-soldh, iredo ut or otherwiscei rcu!ated withoutt hep ub!isher'ps rior consenitn anyf orm efb indingo r cover othert han that in whichi t is pub!isheda nd withouta similarc ondition includingth is conditionb eingi mposedo n the subsequenptu rchaser BritishL ibrary Cataloguinign PublicationD ata FowlerA, fastair Kinds efL iterature 1. Literaryfo rm l Titfe 801 '.9 PN45.5 ISBN 0-19-812857-6 Printedi n GreatB ritain by IpswichB ook Co. Ipswich,S uffolk Preface For quite some time now, it has been taken for granted that the old order of historical kinds has irrevocably gone. If we are to have genres, they must be arrived at de novo rather than ab ovo. And in ehe main, critics have preferred to talk about genres--or "modes"-in a very broad, un historical way. Such theory is sometimes interesting. But it seldom seems eo make for better reading of literature. And since it deals wich a very small repertoire of modes, it has tended to narrow the literary canon. This book springs from the conviction that it is time to enlarge the critical repertory: to recover a sense of the variety of literary forms. lt in quires whether genre in the traditional sense may not still have a place in literature. How do genres function? How are they formed? What is ehe relation of "fixed genre" to mode? My aim has not been to build systems of genres ( there are all too many of those already), but to discuss prob lems and issues that arise when literary groupings are considered in terms of genre. In particular, I have tried to follow out some of the implica tions of treating genres not as permanent classes but as families subject to change. I have tried always to keep diachronic considerations in mind. Not that literature cannot sometimes transcend external history. But eo do so it must accept its own history. The book will seem too audacious to some, to others pedestrian. Wich few exceptions, for example, it deals specifically wich English literature. I am aware of ehe comparatists' objections to genre studies on a national basis, and agree wich ehern. But I have had to weigh against this the great differences between ehe orders of genres in different literatures. Some kinds, indeed, occur exclusively in one, without equivalent elsewhere. Many are international, however, and the decision to concentrate on a single literature was primarily a choice of scale. But although I have fo cused on English literature and the ideas that bear on it, I have intra- VI PREFACE duced other literatures where it seemed helpful to do so. Considering the relevant sources, models, analogues, formative traditions, and theoretical influences inevitably involves a genre critic in some comparative work. Allowing for such involvements, we may think that English literature would not be a disablingly inadequate sample to take, if one knew how to take it. The generic nature of literature may besuch that one extensive literature may stand as an exemplar of literature itself. If I am thought wrang in this, the book may be mentally retitled Kinds of English Litera ture. In any event, this is not a history of criticism. If it were, it would have to find far more space for Continental theorists: for Brunetiere and Lukacs, for Russian formalists, for Hans Robert Jauss, perhaps even for structuralists. As many have noticed, discussions of genre easily become chimerical. This is partly at least because of the paucity of examples of practicable length. I have tried, therefore, to illustrate as much as possible, if only from short forms. Such examples are not, I hope, atypical: others from langer kinds could have been given. Many of the 'examples come from the Renaissance and the eighteenth century. But the disproportion may be allowed, since in those periods genre criticism was especially energetic and illuminating. In dealing with so many different periods in a book of this character, some compromise in treatment of orthography was unavoidable. Nor mally, the spelling has been modernized but not the punctuation. Occa sionally, however, original spelling has been retained where it is signifi cant; then the whole quotation is treated in the same way. Earlier versions of parts of Chapters 5 and 6 were read as lectures, par ticularly a Churchill lecture at Bristol University and a David Nichol Smith Seminar at the Humanities Research Centre, Canberra---opportu nities for which I am grateful. Chapter 12 appeared in a somewhat differ ent form in New Literary History 11 (1979); I wish to thank the editor and publisher for permission to reprint parts of it here. Acknowledg ments are due to Martin Brian and O'Keeffe, Edouard Champion, Yale University Press, the National Council of Teachers of English, and Gerald Duckworth for permission to reprint the epigraph and the dia grams on pages 240, 244, 245, and 247, respectively. In forming the ideas and writing the book, I incurred more debts than can be acknowledged. Most of my colleagues and many of my students at Oxford, Edinburgh, and elsewhere contributed. But I particularly wish to thank E. D. Hirsch, Jr., Ralph Cohen, and the late Wallace Robson for PREFACE Vll their patience and kindness in arguing me out of at least some errors. Paul Barolsky, Ian Donaldson, Sam Goldberg, John Hardy, Jack Levenson, Alastair Minnis, and James Turner all gave generous assistance on particular points. In a more practical sense, completion of the book would not have been possible without periods of study leave at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, and the Humanities Research Centre at the Australian National University, Canberra. There and at Edinburgh, parts of the manuscript were typed by Betty Horton, Sandy Lafferty, Julie Barton, Pearl Moyseyenko, Sheila Strathdee, and Jill Strobridge with much skill and care. Special thanks are due to the late Peter Mclntyre, who prepared the index. The debt to my wife, who read proof and tolerated the vexa tions of authorship, belongs to a large genre that can only be mentioned here. University of Edinburgh A.F. To E. D. HirschJ, r.

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