PAPER
7 - LITERARY CRITICISM
“Application
of Theory – structuralism on A Gujarati Suspense novel ‘Lajja Sanyal’ by
Ashvini Bhatt”
"Structuralism
and Literary Criticism"
The
pagination in brackets refers to the text as republished in David Lodge, Modern
Criticism and Theory.
1: The
critic and the literary: Genette first introduces the good structuralist
conception of the bricoleur as opposed to the engineer; it will turn out that a
critic is a bricoleur , working with what is to hand. Genette turns the artist
into the engineer, a rather literary-critical thing to do.
Genette
then makes the point that as literary criticism uses language to speak of
language use, it is in fact a metaliterature, a literature on a literature.
Poststructuralists will challenge the distinction between the two, and Genette
here refers to Barthes distinctions to suggest that some literary criticism may
be literature.
He
then defines literariness in a way much like a formalist would: literariness is
language production in which the attention is addressed to spectacle rather
than message -- something one supposes like Jakobson's poetic function, or
meta-poetic; in fact to put it right into Jakobson's terms, the attention is on
the poetic rather than on the referential function, on medium rather than on
message. Genette will later in the essay insist that this does not degrade the
meaning-function of the language.
Genette
as well refers to that aspect of literature which is so close to the New
Critical understanding of ambiguity, the 'halt', the attention to the
constitution of meaning under a different aspect, that also characterizes the
literary; so it is that there is only a literary function , no literariness in
any essential or material sense. Genette's sense of the ambiguity of literature
is similar to Jakobson's in "Linguistics and Poetics", in which essay
he writes that "Ambiguity is an intrinsic, inalienable character of any
self-focused message, briefly a corollary feature of poetry...Not only the message
itself but the addresser and the addressee become ambiguous." (pp 49-50 in
Lodge). 
2: The
role of the critic: The critic is secondary to the writer, a bricoleur to the
writer's engineer, but in a position therefore to be primary in the analysis of
culture. The critic treats as signs what the writer is creating as concept: the
attitude, the disposition is different. The critic in reading literature as
signs is reading it as a cultural production, constructed according to various
preconceptions, routines, traditions and so forth of that culture. The critic
does not ignore the meaning, but treats it as mediated by signs, not directly
encountered. (65T) Where the post-structuralist will differ is in their denial
that anything can be transparent: all concepts are themselves constructed of
signs, there is no unmediated thought, all mediated thought is social thought,
there is no attachment to anything beyond the sign. 
3:
Structuralism is more than a linguistic exercise. While structuralism
historically (in Europe) is a linguistic phenomenon, and it would seem
reasonable th at structuralist criticism would then be linguistic in its
nature, this is too simple an assumption.
First
of all, literary language is language used to certain ends, having a certain
function and therefore featuring the qualities of linguistic production and the
relationships of sounds and meaning in a particular way. The ends then are
important. As he writes on page 66, structuralist method as such is constituted
at the very moment when one rediscovers the message in the code, uncovered by
an analysis of the immanent structures and not imposed from the outside by
ideological prejudices. (Poststructuralists will deny that anything can be
innocent of ideology.)
Second,
there is a homology, a structural relationship, between the way language cuts
up the world of meaning, and the way literature and literary genres do. There
is an analogy between literature and linguistics not only because they are both
involved in language but because both deal with:
the
relation between forms and meanings,
the
way reality is culturally defined by the segmentation and identification of
experience,
the
cultural perception of reality, and
the
systemic relationships of signs which underlie those cultural perceptions.
Genette
writes on p. 67 of the idea of a table of concordance, variable in its details
but constant in its function: it is the function, not the detail, that concerns
structuralist thought. One of the elements of literature that Genette deals
with later is genre, which segments experience in certain ways, and controls
the attitudes towards it. What is the place of this individual work in the
systems of representation? That is a key question. 
4:
Structuralism is about meaning, not just about form. Genette is at pains to point
out that structuralism is not just about form, but about meaning, as
linguistics is about meaning. It is a study of the cultural construction or
identification of meaning according to the relations of signs that constitute
the meaning-spectrum of the culture. (67 ft) When Jakobson writes of the
centrality of tropes to imaginative writing, he places the categories of
meaning at the heart of the structural method, as tropes, including metaphor
and metonymy, are the way we say something by saying something else, figures of
signification. Ambiguity, which is a meaning-function, is at the heart of the
poetic function, as we saw in #1 above. Finally in this section, Genette looks
forward to structural analysis at the more macro level of the text, of the analysis
of narratives, for instance -- "an analysis that could distinguish in them
[that is, larger units], by a play of superimpositions [and hence knowledge
through difference], variabvle elements and constant functions, and to
rediscover in them the bi-axial system, familiar to Saussureanlinguistics, of
syntagmatic relations (real connections of functions in the continuity of a
text) and paradigmatic relations (virtual relations between similar or oposed
functions, form one text to another, in the whole of the corpus
considered)>"[68t] 
5:
Structuralism is a general tendency of thought (Cassirer) Structuralism is,
however, not necessarily an intrinsic fact of nature but rather is a way of
thinking; [68] structures are"systems of latent relations, conceived rather
than perceived, which analysis constructs as it uncovers them, and which it
runs the risk of inventing while believing that it is discovering them" --
that is, structures are explanations of coherence and repetition, they appear
in what they seek to explain, they in a sense provide the terms and the vehicle
of explanation. as we can only now through knowledge frames. Structuralism is
the explanation of texts or events in their own terms (as those terms are
conceived), not in relation to external causes.
When
one turns to the internal dynamic of a text as an object, a field of meanings,
and to the coherence of it as a text, rather than as biography or sociology,
one reads structurally. Structuralist reading abandons pyschological,
sociological, and such explanations. One can see New Criticism as a structural
methodology, although it is not structuralism: in structural analysis of theme,
for instance, theme would be seen in the context of the relations of themes,
that is, of certain elements of filaments of the configuration, or network or
matrix of, of social meanings, which meanings constitute culture. 
6:
Structuralism is however not merely intrinsic criticism, the criticism of the
thing itself. Genette mentions the other form of intrinsic criticism,
phenomenological criticism, in which one becomes in touch with the subjectivity
of the creative voice of the work. Ricoeur refers to this, Genette writes, as
the hermeneutic method: the intuitive convergence to two consciousnesses, the
authors and the readers. This is a little confusing, because this is not
hermeneutics properly speaking, but rather phenomenological hermeneutics. When
there is hermeneutics, Genette says, when the text is available to us in that
immediate a way, then structural reading fades; but whenever we have to look
more objectively, when we are transversing barriers of time, say, or of culture
or interest, then the structural method, the search for principles of order,
coherence and meaning, becomes dominant -- literatures [71t] distant in place
and time, children's literature, popular literature. Genette goes on to suggest
that the difference between hermeneutic and structural reading is a matter of
the critical position of the critic -- (between identity and distance, say).
Structuralism is an intrinsic reading free from subjectivity, when we become
the ethnomethodologists of our culture (71).
7:
Structuralism ties the meaning of the work to the meanings of the culture. (72)
Genette suggests that topics is an area of study that structuralism can bring
us to -- the traditional subjects and forms of the culture (from the Greek
topos, 'place'; I prefer to refer to culturally-constucted sites of meaning as
topoi, to try to retain the full meaning of the idea). Topics, or topoi, are
structural in that they underlie the way we talk and think about things in our
culture. They are in a sense psychological, Genette says [72], but collectively
so, not individually. Throughout, in writing of the cultural knowledge that
structuralism provides, Genette has been suggesting that 'high' literature is
not the only, perhaps not the primary, location for the study of cultural
meanings: the serious study of popular culture has begun. 
8:
Structuralism opens the study of genre to new light. Different genres
predispose the reader to different attitudes, different expectations [cf. the
saying, attributed to Voltaire, that life is a comedy to he who thinks and a
tragedy to he who feels, which saying suggests a way in which genres might look
differently at experience]. Different genres lead to different expectations of
types of situations and actions, and of psychological, moral, and esthetic
values. Without conventional expectations we cannot have the difference, the
surprise, the reversals which mark the more brilliant exercise of creativity.
Hence creativity is in a sense structural, as it depends on our expectation,
which it them plays upon. 
9:
Structuralism can be applied to the study of literature as a whole, as a
meaning system. Structurally, literature is a whole; it functions as a system
of meaning and reference no matter how many works there are, two or two
thousand. Thus any work becomes the parole, the individual articulation, of a
cultural langue, or system of signification. As literature is a system, no work
of literature is an autonomous whole; similarly, literature itself is not
autonomous but is part of the larger structures of signification of the
culture.
10:
Structuralism studies literature synchronically, but with diachronic awareness.
Structuralism studies literature historically by studying it as it were in
cross-section at different times, by seeing in what way literature divides up
the traditional topics of the cultural imagination. Change is intrinsic to
literature, as the Russian formalists thought; what the change registers is the
alterations of the relations of meaning within the culture.
Lajja
Sanyal.
-Ashvini
Bhatt. 
Lajja
Sanyal is suspense thriller novel best can be studied with concept like
structuralism in mind. Lajja Sanyal is the protagonist. By profession she is an
actress. In other works also we may see that characters belong to film
industry. Other novels like ‘Angar’ and ‘Othar’ by Ashvini, there are
characters that belong to film industry. 
The
novel starts at the room of court and the judgement was passed that Lajja is a
murderer. She was carried by a van and she eloped from the van. Then readers
are introduced with the incidents one by one. Actually that murder was not done
by Lajja that was revealed at last. That murder was a part of a mission
regarding Army. The frequency, order all parts are carried out in the novel. 

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