Orientation of Critical
Theories – M.H.Abrams (lecture notes)--Criticism & Theory
Introduction
This is the first chapter of the book, The
Mirror and the Lamp, by Abrams. Abrams explains the title of the book thus:
“ The title of the book identifies two common and antithetical metaphors of the
mind”. One of the metaphors compares the mind to a reflector (mirror). The
other (lamp) is a radiant projector, which gives light to others. From Plato to
the 18th century, creative writers considered mind as a mere
reflector of external realities. But during the Romantic period this idea
changed and mind is considered as something that illuminates and gives a new
appearance to external realities. The principal object of Abram’s study is the
suppression of the first idea by the second. The first chapter also gives a
brief survey of criticism. Thus the essay is a very good introduction to modern
criticism.
Abrams
says that today art is considered in relation to the artist. Its relation to
external nature or to the audience is not given much importance. The field of
aesthetic studies is very confusing. I.A. Richards gave the heading “The Chaos
of Critical Theories” to the first chapter of his book, Principles of
Literary Criticism. A good deal of the confusion is caused because of the
belief that criticism is a physical or psychological science. The aim of
criticism is not to establish correlations between facts. On the other
hand it aims to establish principles that will help us to explain, interpret
and evaluate the aesthetic facts. Aesthetic facts are different from reality.
They are not true in the strict scientific sense.
I. Some Coordinates of Art
Criticism. In all theories of art
criticism there are 4 elements –
i. The work or the artistic product (this is a
human product). ii. The artist, iii. The subject – (people and their actions,
ideas and feelings, material things and events, nature etc). The more
comprehensive term universe is better, and iv. Audience – listeners,
spectators, or readers to whom the work is addressed.
Almost all theories of criticism show an
orientation towards one of these elements only. The critic derives his ideas
about categorizing, defining and analyzing a work from one of these terms only.
Three of these elements – universe, artist and audience explain the work
in relation to another thing. The fourth – work – considers it in
isolation as an autonomous whole whose importance or value is decided without
reference to anything beyond itself. These 4 are variables. They differ in
significance according to the theory in which they occur. Take for example the
element universe. 1. It may be
the moral elements of the universe. 2.It may be any element of nature the
artist is imitating. 3. The artist’s world may be one of imagination or of
commonsense. 4. It may include (or may not include) gods, witches, chimeras,
and Platonic ideas.
Abrams now speaks about 4 different types
of theories. They are: -
- Mimetic Theories
- Pragmatic Theories
- Expressive Theories
- Objective theories.
- Mimetic Theories.
i. (The
views of Plato and Socrates)
This theory
views art as an imitation of various aspects of the universe. This is the
oldest aesthetic theory. This concept makes its first appearance in the
dialogues of Plato. The arts of painting, poetry, music, dancing, and
sculpture, Socrates says, are all imitations.
Imitation in the dialogues of Plato
operates with three categories.
a)
The first category is the eternal unchanging Ideas
b)
The second
reflects this. It is the world of sense, natural or artificial.
c)
The third category reflects the second. It comprises of
such things as shadows, images in water or mirrors, and the fine arts.
Socrates
expounds these ideas further. According to him, in the nature of art there are
three beds.
The Idea is
the essence of the bed and it is made by God.
Then, there is the
bed made by the carpenter.
Lastly, there
is the bed found in a painting.
Ø
Since art imitates the world of appearance and
not of essence, it follows that works of art have a lowly status. Art is at second remove from the truth. It is
equally remote from the beautiful and the good.
Ø
All things including art are to be judged by
their relation to the Ideas. So the poet becomes the competitor of the artisan,
the lawmaker and the moralist.
Ø
Plato confirms the poor opinion of poetry when
he points out that its effect on the auditors are bad because it represents
appearances than truth, and nourishes feelings rather than truth.
ii. The
views of Aristotle
Aristotle in the Poetics also
defines poetry as imitation. “Epic poetry, and tragedy, as also comedy…. and most
flute playing and lyre playing are all, viewed as a whole, modes of
imitation” and “the objects the imitator represents are actions”.
In Plato and in
Aristotle, the work of art is seen as an imitation. It is constructed according
to prior models. However Aristotle removed the other world of pure Ideas. He
also treated imitation as something specific to the arts. He also introduced
supplementary distinctions according to the objects imitated, the medium of
imitation and the manner (dramatic, narrative or mixed) in which the imitation
is done. Aristotle also distinguished poetry from other kinds of art, and then
differentiated the various poetic genres – such as epic and drama, tragedy and
comedy. Focusing on tragedy, he differentiates the various elements in it –
plot, character, thought and so on.
Imitation
continued to be a prominent term for a long time after Aristotle – all the way
to 18th century, in fact. The importance given to the term differed
from critic to critic. There was a tendency to replace the term ‘action’ as the
object of imitation with such elements as human character, or thought, or even
inanimate things. Some critics replaced the term imitation itself with such
terms like ‘reflection’, ‘representation’, ‘feigning’, ‘copy’, or ‘image’.
iii. Some 18th
century discussions of the term imitation
Abrams gives
some examples of 18th century discussions of imitation that is of
special interest.
a.
Charles Batteux. His book - The Arts Reduced to a
Single Principle -- was very popular in France and Germany. He
wanted to reduce the rules of art to one single principle. He said that
imitation is not that of crude everyday reality, but of ‘la belle nature’, that
is a model having all perfections. From this stage, Batteux goes on to extract
one by one the rules of taste – general rules for poetry and painting and
detailed rules for the genres.
b.
Lessing. His book, Laokoon, was published in
1776. He tried to remove the confusion in the relation of poetry with the other
graphic and plastic arts. Lessing concludes that poetry, like painting, is
imitation. The diversity between poetry and other arts is in the medium. Poetry
consists of a number of sounds articulated in time whereas painting is forms
and colours fixed in space.
The concept that art is imitation played an important part
in neo-classical aesthetics. Art is seen mostly as an imitation that is
instrumental in producing effects in an audience. The focus of attention has
shifted not from work to universe but from work to audience.
III. Pragmatic Theories
Sidney said that the
aim of poetry is to ‘teach and delight’. To Sidney poetry has a purpose – to achieve
certain effects in an audience. It imitates with the purpose of pleasing
and pleases with the ultimate aim of teaching. This is the gist of the
arguments of Sidney
in Apologie for Poetry.
The poet is elevated from the moral philosopher and the
historian by his capacity to move the audience to virtue.
Ø
Criticism like Sidney’s can be called pragmatic theory.
It looks at the practical aspects of a work of art. The central tendency of
the pragmatic critic is to conceive a poem as something made to create a
particular response in the minds of the readers.
The
perspective and much of the basic vocabulary of pragmatism originated from
the classical theory of rhetoric. Rhetoric is universally accepted
as a way to move men everywhere. The best example for the application of the
theories of rhetoric to poetry is Ars Poetica by Horace. As
Richard Mckeon points out, ‘Horace’s criticism is directed in the main to
instruct the poet how to keep his audience in their seats until the end, how to
induce cheers and applause, how to please a Roman audience, and by the same
token, how to please all audiences and win immortality.’
Horace
Ø
Horace advised that the poet’s aim is either to
profit or to please, or to blend in one the delightful and the useful. Horace
held pleasure to the chief purpose of poetry. To teach and to delight
and to move (another term taken from rhetoric) summarized the total
aesthetic effect on the reader.
For a number
of critics of the Renaissance, the moral effect was the terminal aim, to which
delight and emotion were added. From the time of Dryden, pleasure tended
to become the ultimate end though poetry without profit was considered trivial.
Dryden considered the imitation of nature as the means for pleasure. He also
stressed the importance of rules.
Dr. Johnson
The great
pragmatist of neo-classicism was Dr. Johnson. Abrams takes for consideration “that
great monument of neoclassic criticism” – Preface to Shakespeare.
Johnson
undertakes in his preface to establish the rank of Shakespeare among poets. To
find out the power and excellences of Shakespeare, Johnson addresses himself to
a general examination of Shakespeare’s dramas. In this attempt he again and
again speaks of mimesis or imitation. Repeatedly, he maintains that
Shakespeare’s drama “is the mirror of life. But Johnson also claims, “the end
of writing is to is to instruct by pleasing”. If a poem fails to please,
as a work of art it is nothing. Johnson was also a moralist and insisted that a
work must please without violating the standards of truth and virtue. It is
Shakespeare’s defect ‘that he writes without any moral purpose’.
·
The pragmatic orientation was important through
out the 18th century. But the seeds of destruction were inherent in
pragmatic criticism. Ancient rhetoric had also paid detailed attention to the
speaker himself- his nature or innate powers of genius. In the course of the 18th
century, increasing attention was given to the mental constitution of the poet.
The focus thus gradually shifted to the poet’s natural genius, creative
imagination, and emotional spontaneity of the poet. As a result the audience
gradually disappeared into the background, giving place to the poet himself.
Poet’s mental powers, emotional needs became the important cause and even the
end of art.
IV. EXPRESSIVE THEORIES
“Poetry is the
spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings”, Wordsworth announced in his Preface
to the Lyrical Ballads. He thought the formulation to be so important that
he repeated the statement twice in one essay. Poetry is the overflow, the
utterance, or the projection of the thought and feelings of the poet. This way
of thinking in which the artist becomes the major element is the expressive
theory of art.
Ø
The central ideas of the expressive theory can
be summarized in this way. 1. A work of art is the internal made the external.
2. The primary source and subject matter of a poem is the poet’s mind. 3. If
aspects of external world are the subject, then these are converted from fact
to poetry by the feelings and operations of the poet’s mind. 4. The primary
cause of poetry is the impulse within the poet of feelings and desires seeking
expression. 5. A work is not considered as a mirror to reflect nature. Abrams
writes, ‘the mirror held up to nature becomes transparent and yields the reader
insight into the mind and heart of
the poet himself’.
John Stuart Mill
Mill wrote two essays of literary criticism
in 1833. They are ‘What is poetry’? and ‘The two kinds of Poetry’. These two
essays show the changes that have taken place in expressive theories. Mill’s
primary proposition is this: - Poetry is ‘the expression or uttering forth of
feeling’. Exploration of this aesthetic idea takes Mill to a drastic altering
of the critical commonplaces.
1.
The poetic kinds.
Mill inverts the classical
ranking of poetic kinds. He says that lyric poetry is more poetic than other
forms because it expresses emotions better. Aristotle considered tragedy as the
greatest form of poetry. In tragedy the plot is given the utmost role. But Mill
considers plot as a necessary evil. He says that an epic poem is not poem at
all.
2. Spontaneity as criterion.
Mill says that a man’s emotional status
is innate but his knowledge and skill are acquired. On this basis he divides
poets into two kinds: poets who are born and poets who are made. Shelley
represents the poet who is born and Wordsworth is the poet who is made. With
unconscious irony Mill turns Wordsworth’s definition of poetry against
Wordsworth himself. “Wordsworth’s poetry has little of the appearance of
spontaneousness: the well is never so full that it overflows”.
3 The external world.
Reference to external world
disappears from Mill’s theory. He says that poetry is not in the object but in
the mind itself. An object provides an occasion for generation of poetry. Mill
gives much importance to symbols in poetry. This influenced the Symbolists of
the 20th century.
4. The audience.
Mill reduced the poet’s audience into a single
member, consisting of the poet himself. He says that all poetry is in the form
of a soliloquy. Thus Mill reduced the importance of audience. Keats said, “I
never wrote one single line of poetry with the least shadow of public thought.”
Shelley said that the poet is “like a nightingale who sits in darkness and
sings to cheer its own solitude with sweet sounds; his auditors are as men
entranced by the melody of an unseen musician…” Carlyle believed that the poet
replaced the audience as the generator of aesthetic norms.
Ø
This completes an evolution. In mimetic
theory the poet was very passive. His work was to hold the mirror up to nature.
The pragmatic poet, whatever his abilities are, has to satisfy his audience.
Carlyle’s poet is the hero, the chosen one, who need not care for his audience.
V. OBJECTIVE THEORIES
These theories
consider the work of art in isolation from all points of external reference. It
is seen as a self-sufficient entity. It is judged on the basis of its own
intrinsic nature.
This theory
has been rare in literary criticism. As an all-inclusive approach to poetry, it
began to evolve in the late 18th and 19th centuries. A
poem is considered as a heterocosm, a world of its own, independent of the
world into which we are born. Its aim is not to instruct or please but simply
to exist. A poem, as Poe expressed it, is ‘a poem ‘per se’… written solely for
the poem’s sake’. “Art for Art’s sake”. T.S.Eliot wrote, “When we are
considering poetry we must consider it primarily as poetry and not another
thing”. This is joined with MacLeish’s aphorism “A poem should not mean But
be.” J.C. Ransom called for recognition of ‘the autonomy of the work itself as
existing for its own sake”. In their influential book, Theory of Literature,
Wellek and Warren wrote against ‘intentional fallacy’ and ‘affective fallacy’.
In America
the objective form of criticism has replaced the other forms of criticism.
[Dr.
S. Sree Kumar, Reader,
Postgraduate and Research Department of
English, Government Arts College, Coimbatore-641018. kumarbpc@yahoo.co.uk cell no. 94430 53250]
Thanks for this notes sir... Really it helped me a lot..
ReplyDeleteThank you so much sir.Iam a first year MA student and it has helped me understand Abrams idea.
ReplyDeleteWell explained helped me a lot to understand Abrams idea
ReplyDeletePerfect explanation.
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