Literature
Literature is literally "an acquaintance with
letters" as in the first sense given in the
Oxford English Dictionary; the term has, however, generally come
to identify a collection of
texts.
The word "literature" spelled with a lower-case "l" can refer to any
form of writing, such as essays; while "Literature" spelled with an
upper-case "L" may refer to a whole body of literary work, world-wide
or relating to a specific culture.
Etymologically, the word literature comes from the
Latin word "litera" meaning "a individual written character
(letter)"
Introduction
Nations can have literatures, as can
corporations,
philosophical schools or
historical periods. Popular belief commonly holds that the
literature of a
nation,
for example, comprises the collection of texts which make it a whole
nation. The
Hebrew Bible,
Beowulf,
the
Iliad and the
Odyssey
and the
Constitution of the United States, all fall within this definition
of a kind of literature.
More generally, one can equate a literature with a collection of
stories, poems and plays that revolve around a particular topic. In
this case, the stories, poems and plays may or may not have
nationalistic implications. The
Western Canon forms one such literature.
Classifying a specific item as part of a literature (whether as
American literature, advertising literature,
gay and lesbian literature or
Roman literature) can involve severe difficulties. To some people,
the term "literature" can apply broadly to any symbolic record which
can include images,
sculptures, as well as letters. To others, a literature must only
include examples of text composed of letters, or other narrowly
defined examples of symbolic written language (hieroglyphs,
for example). Even more conservative interpreters of the concept would
demand that the text have a physical form, usually on paper or some
other portable form, to the exclusion of
inscriptions or
digital media.
Furthermore, people may perceive a difference between "literature"
and some popular forms of written work. The terms "literary fiction"
and "literary merit" often serve to distinguish between individual
works. For example, almost all literate people percieve the works of
Charles Dickens as "literature", whereas many tend to look down on
the works of
Jeffrey Archer as unworthy of inclusion under the general heading
of
English literature. Critics may exclude works from the
classification "literature", for example, on the grounds of a poor
standard of
grammar
and
syntax, of an
unbelievable or disjointed
story-line,
or of inconsistent or unconvincing
characters.
Genre fiction (e.g. romance, crime, science fiction) may also
become excluded from consideration as "literature".
Frequently, the texts that make up literature crossed over these
boundaries.
Illustrated stories,
hypertexts,
cave paintings and inscribed
monuments have all at one time or another pushed the boundaries of
what is and is not literature
Forms of literatu
Poetry
A poem
is a composition usually written in
verse.
Poems rely heavily on
imagery,
precise word choice, and
metaphor; they may take the form of measures consisting of
patterns of stresses (metric
feet) or of patterns of different-length syllables (as in
classical prosody); and they may or may not utilise
rhyme.
Poetry
is difficult to characterize precisely. Typically though, poetry as a
form of literature makes some significant use of the formal
properties of the words it uses — these properties being attached to
the
written or
spoken
form of the words, rather than to their meaning. Metre depends on
syllables and on
rhythms
of speech; rhyme and
alliteration depend on words that have similar pronunciation. Some
contemporary poets, such as
e. e. cummings, made extensive use of words'
visual form.
Poetry perhaps pre-dates other forms of literature: early known
examples include the
Sumerian
Epic of Gilgamesh (dated from around
3000 B.C.), the
Bible
and the surviving works of
Homer
(the Iliad
and the
Odyssey).
Much poetry uses specific forms: the
haiku,
the
limerick, the
sonnet,
for example. A haiku must have seventeen syllables, distributed over
three lines in groups of five, seven, and five, and should have an
image of a season and something to do with
nature.
A limerick has five lines, with a
rhyme scheme of AABBA, and line lengths of 3,3,2,2,3 stressed
syllables.
Language and tradition dictate some poetic norms: Greek poetry
rarely rhymes, Italian or French poetry often does, English and German
can go either way (although modern non-rhyming poetry often, perhaps
unfairly, has a more "serious" aura). Perhaps the most
paradigmatic style of English poetry, blank verse, as exemplified
in
Shakespeare and
Milton, consists of unrhymed
iambic pentameters. Some languages prefer longer lines; some
shorter ones. Some of these conventions result from the ease of
fitting a specific language's vocabulary and grammar into certain
structures, rather than into others; for example, some languages
contain more rhyming words than others, or typically have longer
words. Other structural conventions come about as the result of
historical accidents, where many speakers of a language associate good
poetry with a verse form preferred by a particular good poet.
Works for theatre (see below) traditionally took verse form. This
has now become rare outside
opera
and
musicals, although many would argue that the language of drama
remains intrinsically poetic
Drama
A play
or drama
is another, classical literary form that has continued to evolve over
the years. It is comprised chiefly of
dialogue between
characters, and is usually intended for dramatic / theatrical
performance (see
theatre)
rather than reading. During the
eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries,
opera
developed as a combination of poetry, drama, and
music.
Nearly all drama was in verse form until comparatively recently.
Greek drama is the earliest form of drame for which we have
substantial knowledge.
Tragedy,
as a dramatic
genre,
developed as a performance associated with
religious and civic
festivals, typically enacting or developing upon well-known
historical or
mythological themes. Tragedies were generally very serious in
theme and treated important conflicts in human nature, but were not
necessarily "tragic" as currently understood— meaning sad and without
a
happy ending.
Comedy,
as a dramatic genre, was a later development; Greek festivals
eventually came to include three tragedies counterbalanced by a comedy
or
satyr play.
Modern theatre does not in general adhere to any of these
restrictions of form or theme. A play is anything written for
performance by
actors
(screenplays,
for example); and even some things that are not; many contemporary
writers have taken advantage of the dialogue-centred character of
plays as a way of presenting literary work that is intended simply to
be read, not performed.
Essays
An essay
is a discussion of a topic from an author's personal point of view,
exemplified by works by
Francis Bacon or
Charles Lamb. A
memoir
is the story of an author's life from his personal point of view. An
epistle
is usually a formal, didactic, or elegant
letter.
'Essay' in English derives from the French 'essai', meaning
'attempt'. Thus an essay may be open-ended, provocative, inconclusive;
or all three. The first writings identified as "essays" were the
self-reflective musings of
Michel de Montaigne, and he is still seen today as the father of
this literary for
Prose fiction
Prose is writing that does not adhere to any
particular formal structures (other than simple grammar); "non-poetic
writing," writing, perhaps. The term is sometimes used pejoratively,
but prosaic writing is simply writing that says something without
necessarily trying to say it in a beautiful way, or using beautiful
words. Prose writing can of course be beautiful; the suggestion then
is that it is not beautiful by virtue of the formal features of words
(rhymes, alliteration, meter), but the distinction does not need to be
marked precisely, and perhaps cannot be. There is "prose
poetry," which attempts to convey the aesthetic richness typical
of poetry using only prose; and there is "free
verse," which is poetry not adhering to any of the strictures of
one or another formal poetic style.
Narrative
fiction
generally favours prose for the writing of novels, short stories, and
the like. Singular examples of these exist throughout history, but
they did not develop into systematic and discrete literary forms until
relatively recently. Length often serves to categorize works of prose
fiction. Although lines remain somewhat arbitrary,
publishing conventions dictate the following:
- A
short story comprises prose writing of less than 10,000 to
20,000 words, but typically more than 500 words, which may or may
not have a narrative arc.
- A story containing between 20,000 and 50,000 words falls into
the
novella category.
- A work of fiction containing more than 50,000 words falls
squarely into the realm of the
novel.
A novel
consists simply of a long story written in prose; yet it developed
comparatively recently. In Europe
Cervantes wrote perhaps the first significant novel:
Don Quixote, published in
1600.
Earlier works, such as the
Decameron and the
Canterbury Tales, have comparable forms and would probably
classify as novels if written today. Earlier works written in Asia
resemble even more strongly the novel as we now think of it— for
example, works such as the
Chinese
Romance of the Three Kingdoms and the
Japanese
Tale of Genji by
Lady Murasaki.
Early novels in Europe did not, at the time, count as significant
literature, perhaps because "mere" prose writing seemed easy and
unimportant. It has become clear, however, that prose writing can
provide aesthetic pleasure without adhering to poetic forms.
Additionally, the freedom authors gain in not having to concern
themselves with verse structure translates often into a more complex
plot or
into one richer in precise detail than one typically finds even in
narrative poetry. This freedom also allows an author to experiment
with many different literary styles— including poetry— in the scope of
a single novel.
See
Ian
Watt's The Rise of the Novel. [This definition needs
expansio
Other prose literature
Philosophy,
history,
journalism, and legal and scientific writings have traditionally
ranked as literature. They olofedr some of the oldest prose writings
in existence; novels and prose stories earned the names "fiction" to
distinguish them from factual writing or
nonfiction, which writers historically have crafted in prose.
This has become less so in the case of science over the last two
centuries, as advances and specialization have made new scientific
research inaccessible to most audiences; science is appears mostly in
journals. Scientific works of
Euclid,
Aristotle,
Copernicus, and
Newton still possess great value; but since the science in them
has largely become outdated, they no longer serve for scientific
instruction, yet they remain too technical to sit well in most
literature programmes. Outside of history of science programmes
students rarely read such works. Many books "popularizing" science
might still deserve the title "literature"; history will tell.
Philosophy, too, has become an increasingly academic discipline.
More of its practitioners lament this situation than occurs with the
sciences; nonetheless most new philosophical work appears in
academic journals. Major philosophers through history --
Plato,
Aristotle,
Augustine,
Descartes,
Nietzsche -- have become as
canonical
as any writers. Some recent philosophy undoubtedly merits the title
"literature" — the work of
Wittgenstein, for example, does; but much of it does not, and some
areas, such as logic, have become extremely technical to the same
degree as the sciences.
A great deal of historical writing can still rank as literature,
particularly the genre known as
creative nonfiction. So can a great deal of journalism, such as
literary journalism. However these areas have become extremely
large, and often have a utilitarian purpose: to record data or convey
immediate information. As a result the writing in these fields often
lacks a literary quality, although it often and in its better moments
has that quality. Major historians include
Herodotus,
Thucydides and
Procopius, all of whom count as canonical literary figures.
Law
offers a less clear case. Some writings of
Plato
and
Aristotle, or even the early parts of the
Bible,
might count as legal. The law tables of
Hammurabi of
Babylon
might count.
Roman civil law as codified during the reign of
Justinian I of
Byzantium has a reputation as significant literature. The founding
documents of many countries, including the
Constitution of the United States, count as literature, however
legal writing now rarely exhibits literary merit.
Most of these fields, then, through specialization or
proliferation, no longer generally constitute "literature" in the
sense under discussion. They may sometimes count as "literary
literature"; more often they produce what one might call "technical
literature" or "professional literature."
Somewhat related narrative forms
Comics (or graphic novels) present stories told
in a combination of sequential artwork, dialogue and te
Genres of literature
-
Alternate history
-
Autobiography
-
Bildungsroman
-
Biography
-
Children's literature
-
Constrained writing
-
Diaries and Journals
-
Fiction
-
Crime fiction,
Detective fiction
-
Family Saga
-
Gothic
-
Historical fiction
-
Historiographical metafiction
-
Legal thriller
-
Mystery
-
Roman à clef
-
Romance
-
Satire
-
Speculative fiction
-
Fantasy
-
Horror
-
Science fiction
- The
Slave narrative
-
Spy fiction/Political thriller
-
Thriller
-
Western
-
Oral Narrative (Oral
History)
-
Poet
-
Commonplace
-
Epistolary novel
-
First-person narrative
-
Omniscient narrator
-
Transcription
-
Translation
-
Vision / Prophecy
-
Story within a story
-
Flashback
-
Metafiction
-
Fictional guidebook
-
False document
-
Lipogram
-
Plagiarism
Literary figures
-
Authors
-
Critics
-
Dramatists
-
Essayists
-
Journalist
-
Novelists
- Poets
-
Short story authors
-
Writers
Literature by country or language
-
American literature
-
Anglo-Welsh literature
-
Arabic literature
-
Australian literature
-
Babylonian literature and science
-
Bengali literature
-
Bohemian literature
-
Canadian literature
-
Catalan literature
-
Celtic literature
-
Chinese literature
-
Croatian literature
-
Czech literature
-
Danish literature
-
Dutch literature
-
English literature
-
Finnish literature
-
French literature
-
German literature
-
Greek literature
-
Hungarian literature
-
Icelandic literature
-
Indian writing in English
-
Irish literature
-
Israeli literature
-
Italian literature
-
Japanese literature
-
Korean literature
-
Latin literature
-
Malayalam literature
-
New Zealand literature
-
Norwegian literature
-
Pakistani literature
-
Persian literature
-
Philippine literature
-
Polish literature
-
Portuguese literature
-
Provençal literature
-
Romanian literature
-
Russian literature
-
Scottish literature
-
Serbian literature
-
Slovak literature
-
Slovene literature
-
South African literature
-
Spanish literature
-
Tamil literature
-
Turkish literature
-
Urdu/Hindi literature
-
Western literature , see
Otto Maria Carpeaux
-
Yiddish literatur
Literary analysis
-
Analyzing fiction
-
Analyzing literature
-
Analyzing plays
-
Analyzing poetry
-
Character analysis
-
Literary topos
Story elements
-
Elements of plot
-
Figurative language
-
Inclusio
-
Setting ton
Themes in literature
-
Anti-heroes
-
Adultery in literature
-
Chess in early literature
-
Family life in literature
-
Generation in literature
-
Heroines in literature
-
Losers in literature
-
Norse mythological influences on later literature
-
Post-colonialism in literature
-
Robots in literature
-
School and university in literature
-
Smuggling in literature
-
Technology and culture in literature
-
Tourism in literature
Literary periods for English literature
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Old English
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Middle English
Early modern (renaissance)
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Elizabethan
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Jacobean
-
Caroline
-
Commonwealth
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Neoclassical
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Restoration
-
Augustan
Age of Sensibility
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Romanticism
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Victorian
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Edwardian
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Georgian
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Modern
-
Post-Modern