For the Skull Beneath the Skin, our teacher gave us a bunch of criticisms which we had to read about and then apply to TSBS. However, i'm majorly majorly confused about one - structuralist criticism.
Structuralist Criticism:
Because structuralist critics assume that human structure (or make sense of) reality by imposing patterns of meaning on it, and because they assume that these structures can only be interpreted in terms of the codes the structures emboy, they believe that writers will inevitably rely on such codes to create meaning, that texts will inevitably embody such codes, and that audiences will inevitably interpret texts. To understand a text, the critic must be familiar with the systematic codes that shape it; he must master the system(s) the text implies.
Structuralist adopts a position of not seeing things from within the cultural context of society. A structuralist would argue that traditional critics create a context for the work by relating it to their own view of life. Structuralist criticism points out how the text might be discussing the gap between the word written and the world. Traditional criticism finds a complex statement about life in a text whereas the structuralist critic sees limits on literature, how the world is more complex than the self-contained system of the text.
Does it mean that the structuralist critic, critic the structure imposed on reality by the characters in the novel? Would that then mean that it's basically critically analysing the deduction process that Cornelia goes through? And then, assuming the above is true, isn't that undermining the whole novel? Isn't the whole point of crime fiction for a crime to occur and the detective and the audience to go on a logical deduction process?????
ideas?
Structuralist Criticism:
Because structuralist critics assume that human structure (or make sense of) reality by imposing patterns of meaning on it, and because they assume that these structures can only be interpreted in terms of the codes the structures emboy, they believe that writers will inevitably rely on such codes to create meaning, that texts will inevitably embody such codes, and that audiences will inevitably interpret texts. To understand a text, the critic must be familiar with the systematic codes that shape it; he must master the system(s) the text implies.
Structuralist adopts a position of not seeing things from within the cultural context of society. A structuralist would argue that traditional critics create a context for the work by relating it to their own view of life. Structuralist criticism points out how the text might be discussing the gap between the word written and the world. Traditional criticism finds a complex statement about life in a text whereas the structuralist critic sees limits on literature, how the world is more complex than the self-contained system of the text.
Does it mean that the structuralist critic, critic the structure imposed on reality by the characters in the novel? Would that then mean that it's basically critically analysing the deduction process that Cornelia goes through? And then, assuming the above is true, isn't that undermining the whole novel? Isn't the whole point of crime fiction for a crime to occur and the detective and the audience to go on a logical deduction process?????
ideas?