Literature
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LiteraTure
Literature is literally "an acquaintance with
letters" (as in the first sense given in the
Oxford English Dictionary), but has generally come to identify a
collection of
texts. Nations can have literatures, as can corporations,
philosophical schools or historical periods. It is commonly held that a
literature of a nation, for example, is the collection of texts which
make it a whole nation. The
Hebrew
Bible,
Beowulf, the
Iliad and the
Odyssey and the
American constitution, all fall within this definition of a kind of
literature. More generally, a literature is equated 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 is one such literature.
Classifying a specific item as being part of a literature (be it
American literature[?], advertising literature, gay and lesbian
literature[?] or Roman literature[?]) is very difficult. To some people,
"literature" can be broadly applied 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, there is a perceived difference between "literature" and
some popular forms of written work. The terms "literary fiction" and
"literary merit" are often used to distinguish between individual works.
For example, the works of
Charles Dickens are perceived by almost everyone as being
"literature", whereas the works of
Jeffrey Archer tend to be looked down on as unworthy of inclusion
under the general heading of
English literature. Works may be excluded if, for example, the
standard of grammar and syntax is poor, the story unbelievable or
disjointed, the characters inconsistent or unconvincing.
Genre fiction (eg. romance, crime, science fiction) is sometimes
excluded from consideration as "literature".
Frequently, these boundaries are crossed by the texts that make up
literature. Illustrated stories,
hypertexts, cave paintings and inscribed monuments have all at one
time or another pressed the boundaries of what is and is not literature.
A
poem is a composition usually written in verse. Poems rely heavily
on imagery, precise word choice, and metaphor, may be written in
measures consisting of patterns of stresses (metric feet), and may be
rhymed or unrhymed. It is difficult to characterize poetry precisely.
Typically, though, poetry is literature that makes some significant use
of the formal properties of the words it uses--those properties
attached to the written or spoken form of a word, rather than to its
meaning. Metre depends on syllables and speaking rhythms; rhyme and
alliteration depend on words having similar pronunciations. Some
contemporary poets, such as
E. E. Cummings, make extensive use of the visual form of a word.
Poetry is perhaps the oldest form of literature: The Sumerian
Epic of Gilgamesh dates from around 3000 B.C.; the
Bible and the works of Homer, the
Iliad and the
Odyssey.
Much poetry is written in 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.
Some poetic norms are language-specific: Greek poetry rarely rhymes,
Italian or French poetry often does, English and German can go either
way (although non-rhyming poetry is often, perhaps unfairly, treated as
more "serious"). Perhaps the most paradigmatic style of English poetry
(exemplified in
Shakespeare and
Milton) is blank verse: unrhymed
iambic
pentameter. Some languages prefer longer lines; some shorter. Some
of these conventions result from the ease of fitting a language's
vocabulary and grammar into certain structures rather than others (for
example, some languages contain more rhyming words than others, or
typically have longer words). Other structural conventions are
historical accidents, resulting from many speakers of a language
associating good poetry with a verse form preferred by a particular good
poet.
Works for theatre (see below) were traditionally written in verse.
This is rare nowadays, although many would argue that the language of
drama remains intrinsically poetic.
A
play is another classical literary form that has continued to evolve
over the years, comprised chiefly of dialog between characters, usually
intended for dramatic / theatrical (see
theatre) performance rather than reading. During the eigteenth 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 we have substantial knowledge of. The
Tragedy developed as a performance associated with religious and
civic festivals, typically enacting or developing upon well-known themes
in history or mythology. Tragedies were generally very serious in theme
and treated important conflicts in human nature, but were not
necessarily "tragic" as the word is nowadays used--meaning sad and
without a happy ending.
Comedy was a later development; Greek festivals eventually came to
include three tragedies balanced 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.
An
essay is a discussion of a topic from an author's personal point of
view. 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.
"Prose" denotes 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 in
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, of course, the "prose poem," which attempts to
convey the aesthetic richness typical of poetry using only prose; and
there is the "free verse", which is poetry not adhering to any of the
strictures of one or another formal poetic style.
Prose is the normal form of writing for fiction: novels, short
stories, and so forth. (The term "fiction" does not normally apply to
poetry, even poetry used to tell stories.) All of these exist in
occasional scattered form throughout history, but have not developed
into systematic and discrete literary forms until relatively recently.
Prose works of fiction are sometimes categorized by length. The lines
are somewhat arbitrary, since one can wrote a work with any number of
words; yet publishing convention dictates the following: A
short story is prose writing of less than 20,000 words (and usually
more than 500 words) which may or may not have a narrative arc. A story
more than about 20,000 words is called a
novella. Beyond that, especially when beyond 50,000 words, a work of
fiction is called a
novel. For an interesting discussion about short stories from their
originating time, see Edgar Allan Poe's
A
novel is simply a long story written in prose; yet it is a
comparatively recent development. In Europe the first significant novel
is perhaps Don Quixote, published in 1600. Yet earlier works,
such as the Decameron, the Canterbury Tales have
comparable forms, and would probably be called novels if they were
written today. Earlier works in Asia, such as China's Romance of the
Three Kingdoms" and Japan's Tale of Genji by Lady Murasaki,
even more strongly resemble the novel as we now think of it.
Early novels in Europe were not, at the time, viewed as significant
literature. Perhaps this was because "mere" prose writing was seen as
easy and so unimportant. It has become clear, however, that prose
writing can be aesthetically pleasing without adhering to poetic forms;
and the freedom the author gains in not having to concern himself wih
verse structure often translates into a more complex plotor one richer
in precise detail than is typical of the plots even of narrative poetry.
This also frees the 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
to be expanded]
Philosophy, History, Journalism, and legal and scientific writings
have traditionally been called literature. They are among the oldest
prose writings in existence; novels and prose stories earned the names
"fiction" to distinguish them from factual writing, which is what prose
has historically been used for.
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 now published mostly
in journals. Scientific works of Euclid, Aristotle, Copernicus, and
Newton still great value; but since the science in them is largely
outdated, they can no longer be used for scientific instruction, yet
they are too technical to sit well in most literature programmes.
Nowadays they are read less and less outside of history of science
programmes. There are a number of books "popularizing" science which
might still deserve the title "literature"; history will tell.
Philosophy too has become increasingly an academic discipline. This
is lamented by more of its practicitioners than was the case with the
sciences; nonetheless most new philosophical work is done in academic
journals. Major philosophers through history: Plato, Aristotle,
Augustine, Descartes, Nietzsche--have become as canonical as any writers
can be. Some contemporary philosophy undoubtedly merits being called
"literature"--the work of Wittgenstein, for example; 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 be called literature, as
can a great deal of journalism; but these areas have become extremely
large, and often their purpose is just utilitarian: to record data or
convey immediate information. As a result the writing in these fields is
not as a rule literary, although it often and in its better moments is.
Major historians include
Herodotus,
Thucydides,
Procopius, all of whom are considered canonical literary figures.
Law is a less clear case. Some writings of Plato and Aristotle, or event
he early parts of the Bible, might count as legal. The law tables of
Hammurabi of Babylon might count. Roman civil law was codified during
the reign of Justinian I of Byzantium, and this is considered
significant literature. The founding documents of many countries,
including the Constitution of the United States, are treated as
literature. But nowadays legal writing is rarely noted for its literary
merits.
Most of these fields, then, through specialization or proliferation,
no longer generally constitute "literature" in the sense under
discussion. They may sometimes be "literary literature"; more often they
are what might be called "technical literature" or "professional
literature."
Comics are generally illustrated pictures with explanatory text
added for character lines and story commentary.
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Alternate history
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Autobiography
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Bildungsroman
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Biography
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Children's literature
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Constrained writing
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Diaries and Journals
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Fiction
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Crime fiction,
Detective fiction
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Family Saga
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Fantasy
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Gothic
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Historical fiction
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Historiographical metafiction[?]
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Horror
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Legal thriller[?]
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Mystery
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Romance[?]
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Satire
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Science fiction
- The
Slave narrative
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Spy fiction/Political thriller
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Thriller[?]
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Western
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Oral Narrative (Oral
History)
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Poetry
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Epistolary novel
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First-person narrative
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Omniscient narrator
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Transcription
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Translation
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Vision / Prophecy[?]
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Story within a story
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Flashback
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Fictional guidebook
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False document
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Lipogram
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Plagiarism
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Authors
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Critics
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Dramatists
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Essayists
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Journalist
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Novelists
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Poets
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Short story authors
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Writers
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Anglo-Welsh literature
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Babylonian literature and science
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Canadian literature
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Chinese literature
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Literature of the Czech Republic
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Danish Literature
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English literature
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French literature
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German literature
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Greek literature
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Irish literature[?]
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Japanese literature
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Korean literature[?]
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Latin literature
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Malayalam literature
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New Zealand literature
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Norwegian literature
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Polish literature
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Russian literature
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Scottish literature
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Slovak literature[?]
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Slovene literature[?]
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Tamil Literature
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Chess in early literature
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Adultery in literature
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Family life in literature
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Generation in literature[?]
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Heroines in literature
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Anti-heroes
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Losers in literature
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Norse mythological influences on later literature
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Post-colonialism in literature[?]
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Robots in literature
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School and university in literature
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Smuggling in literature
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Technology and Culture in literature[?]
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Tourism in literature
- Pre-Modern (Medieval)[?]
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Old English
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Middle English
- Early Modern (Renaissance)[?]
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Elizabethan
- Jacobean[?]
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Caroline
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Commonwealth
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Neoclassical
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Restoration
- Augustan[?]
- Age of Sensibility[?]
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Romantic
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Victorian
- Edwardian[?]
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Georgian
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Modern
- Post-Modern[?]
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Blindness literature
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Literature cycle
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Rabbinic literature
See also:
- Google:
Literature (http://directory.google.com/Top/Arts/Literature/),
Electronic Text Archives (http://directory.google.com/Top/Arts/Literature/Electronic_Text_Archives/),
Magazines and E-zines (http://directory.google.com/Top/Arts/Literature/Magazines_and_E-zines/),
Online Writing (http://directory.google.com/Top/Arts/Online_Writing/),
Writers Resources (http://directory.google.com/Top/Arts/Writers_Resources/),
Libraries, Digital (http://directory.google.com/Top/Reference/Libraries/Digital/),
Cataloguing, Metadata ,
Distance Learning (http://directory.google.com/Top/Reference/Education/Distance_Learning/)
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T. Miles: Resources for Research and Writing (http://www.as.wvu.edu/~tmiles/resources.html)
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nzdl.org: The New Zealand Digital Library (http://www.nzdl.org/)
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The Universal Library (http://www.ulib.org/),
Books (http://www.ulib.org/webRoot/Books/),
Collections (http://www.ulib.org/webRoot/Collections/)
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Free computer books online (http://gshulkin.hypermart.net/books/Books.html)
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e-zine-list: John Labovitz's e-zine-list (http://www.meer.net/~johnl/e-zine-list/)
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AnyLit.com (http://www.anylit.com) - an online publisher
of literature
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Project Gutenberg Online Library (http://gutenberg.net)
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Abacci (http://www.abacci.com/books/default.asp) -
Project Gutenberg texts matched with Amazon reviews
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George MacDonald Complete E-Texts (http://www.ccel.org/m/macdonald/)
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Faerie Tales and Romantic Literature (http://www.mrrena.com/entryway.shtml)
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Free Books & Book Reviews Online (http://www.HavenWorks.com/books)
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Internet Book List (http://www.iblist.com) - A database
of many books with user reviews and ratings
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Blackmask Online (http://www.blackmask.com) A very large
selection of electronic online texts by a wide variety of authors
from a wide range of literature.
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The Online Books Page (http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu)
A very good search engine for the free online ebooks
What are our priorities for writing in this area? To help develop a list
of the most basic topics in Literature, please see
Literature basic topics.
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