Saturday, October 18, 2008

What is Literary Criticism?

Literary criticism is a way of reading and interpreting the Bible by focusing on synchronic methods, which is evaluating the text as if it is a finished product. This can include looking at genre and rhetoric, among others. It is a way to find meaning within the text and try to see what it means as a literary work.

Genre is looked at in literary criticism. Whether the passage you are reading is a narrative or poetry, or some other genre, can affect how it is interpreted. With narrative criticism, one might try to “analyze the text with respect to thematic lines, plot, character development, point of view, or other appropriate features of narratives” (Gorman 196). By focusing on these key facts, one can discover many interesting things about the text. Unfortunately, sometimes these facts are not made applicable to the life of the church today, so it becomes just a story.

Rhetoric is another synchronic criticism. With this view, “texts exist to have an effect on the hearer/reader, and biblical writings exhibit ancient, modern, and universal rhetorical devices and forms” (Gorman 197). How is the text communicating, and is it communicating effectively? Depending on the form of rhetoric, different passages could have different meanings and effects on the reader. Because a text was written a certain way, was the author trying to communicate something different than is explicitly stated? Was this form effective or not?

Literary criticism is an overarching category that can include linguistic analysis also. This is focusing more on vocabulary, semantics, and grammar. Depending on how words are arranged and translated can have an effect on the meaning of a passage. This can go pretty in depth into linguistic analysis to figure out what words mean what and what their arrangement means. Again, these findings can be interesting, but sometimes are not applicable to life today. An interpreter can also get so wrapped up in these technicalities that he or she can miss the main message of the passage.

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