From The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics:
GENRE. The term "genre"is often used interchangeably with "type,"
"kind," and "form." Western theory on the subject of whether works of
literature can be classified into distinct kinds appears at the
beginning of literary study and has sustained active controversies in
every stage of literary history. Alternately extolled and condemned,
praised for its potential for order and ingnored as, finally,
irrelevant, the concept takes its tone, in every age, from the
particular theory that surrounds it. Theorists approached it
prescriptively until about the end of the 18th century, descriptively
thereafter; and it retains its viability (if not always its honor)
through the plethora of modern comments about the nature of
possibilities of literature. But built into its ways of working are
difficulties that have ultimately to do with a version of the
hermeneutic circle: how can we choose specific works to draw a
definition of, say, epic (q.v.) unless we already know what an epic is?
Though answered in various ways, the question continues to insinuate
itself.
Classical poetics (q.v.) had no systematic theory about the concept of
genre. What thinking there is at the beginning of western poetics
originates from a distinction made by Plato between two possible modes
of reproducing an object or person: (1) by description (i.e. by
portraying it by means of words) or (2) by mimicry or impersonation
(i.e. by imitating it). Since poetry according to the mimetic theory
(see IMITATION; REPRESENTATION AND MIMESIS; POETRY, THEORIES OF)
was conceived as such a reproduction of external objects, these two
modes became the main division of poetry: dramatic poetry (q.v.) or the
theatre was direct imitation or miming of persons, and narrative poetry
(q.v.) or the epic was the portrayal of descriptions of human actions.
But since this simple division obviously left out too much, a third division was inserted between the two others (Republic
3.392-94): the so-called mixed mode, in which narrative alternates with
dialogue (q.v.), as is usually the case in epic poetry (which is rarely
pure narrative). But no new principle of classification was thereby
introduced, so no room was left for the genre of self-expression or the
lyric (q.v.), in whicvh the poet expresses directly her or his own
thoughts or feelings. The extensive use of Homer as a model gave clear
if implicit preference to the epic, a point echoed in Laws, which
comments effectually mark the beginning of the hierarchy of genres. The
classification is as much moral as it is literary. Plato says
subsequently that the guardians should imitate only the most suitable
characters (395) but that there are impersonators who will imitate
anything (397).
Prior to Plato, during the Attic age, we find a wide variety of terms
for specific genres: the epic or recited poetry; the drama or acted
poetry, subdivided into tragedy and comedy (qq.v.); then iambic or
satirical poetry, so called because written in iambic meter (see IAMBIC; INVECTIVE; CHOLIAMBUS); and elegiac poetry (see ELEGY), also written in a distinctive meter, the elegiac couplet (see ELEGIAC DISTYCH),
with its offshoots the epitaph and the epigram (qq.v.), all classed
together because composed in the same meter. Then there was choral or
melic poetry (q.v.), as it was later called, poetry sung by a chorus to
the accompaniment of a flute or stringed instrument. Melic poverty comes
closest to our concept of the lyric, but it is not divorced from music
and it excludes what we consider the essentially lyric genres of the
elegy and epigram. In addition, there was the hymn (q.v.), the dirge
(q.v.) or threnos, and the dithyramb (q.v.), a composition
in honor of Dionysius which could be anything from a hymn to a miniature
play. Songs of triumph or of celebration included the paean, the
encomium, the epinikion, and the epithalamium (qq.v.) There was
certainly plenty of material in Greek poetry to make up a concept of
lyric poetry, but the early Greeks apparently contented themselves with
classifying by such criteria as metrical form.
The purely extrinsic scheme used for the nonce by Plato is taken up by Aristotle in Poetics
ch. 3, where it becomes the foundation of his main classification of
poetic genres. Aristotle gives no express recognition of the lyric
there, much less in his statement that in the second of these genres the
poet "speaks in his own person": that is merely Aristotle's way of
saying that the narrative is the poet's own discourse and not a speech
by a fictitious character of drama. So the traditional tripartite
division of poetic genres or kinds into epic, dramatic, and lyric, far
from being a "natural" division first discovered by the Greek genius, is
not to be found in either Plato or Aristotle. It was, rather, the
result of a long and tedious process of compilation or adjustment,
through the repetition with slight variations of certain traditional
lists of poetic genres, which did not reach the modern formula of the
three divisions until the 16th century.
Nevertheless, Aristotle's classifications of kind in the Poetics
make him the source and arbiter of genre study (though often at only
second or even third hand, and frequently warped) for nearly two
millennia. Like Plato, Aristotle argues that poetry is a species of
imitation. The medium of imitation concerns the instrumentality through
which the various kinds are presented. The object of imitation, men in
action, has both contentual and moral aspects, tragedy and comedy
dealing with men as better or worse than they are; but the package is
not nearly so neat because Cleophon, though a tragic poet, represents a
middle way, men as they are—a significant point which shows how
Aristotle's examples can complicate the issue appropriately. On the
manner of imitation, Aristotle continues the general Platonic divisions
according to the status of the speaker.
All of this supports the view that Aristotle is arguably the first formalist, the first exponent of organic unity (see ORGANICISM);
for him, mode, object, and manner, working together, not only make for
the "character" of the kind but affect (and effect) all that each aspect
does and is. Yet he is a formalist and a good deal more, for his
connection of genre with tone and moral stance led not only to later
quarrels about decorum (q.v.) and mixed modes but also, and more
profitably, about the ways in which texts seek to conceive and
appropriate tha world—that is, the difficult business of representation,
including his implicit debate with Plato over its possibilities and
value.
After Aristotle, it was Alexandrian scholarship that undertook the first
comprehensive stock-taking of Greek poetry and began the process of
grouping, grading, and classifying genres. Lists or "canons" of the best
writers of each kind were made, which led to a sharper awareness of
genre. The first extant grammarian to mention the lyric as a genre was
Dionysius Thrax (2d c. B.C.), in a list which comprises, in all, the
following: "Tragedy, Comedy, Elegy, Epos, Lyric, and Threnos," lyric
meaning for him, still, poetry sung to the lyre. In Alexandrian
literature, other genres were added to the list, especially the idyll
and pastoral (qq.v.).
The Greek conceptions of genre were themselves radically generic in the
sense of putting the issues in their elemental forms. What
followed—adulation, elaboration, correction, rejection—built on those
ways of working. Yet it was clear to later Classicism (q.v.) that these
treatises needded supplementary detail, their nearly exclusive emphases
on epic and tragedy being insufficient to cover the complex topography
of genre. Futher, with the model of the Greeks so potent that there was
no thought of undoing their principles, it seemed best not only to
elaborate but to clarify and purify, to establish principles of tact
which were not only matters of taste (q.v.) but, ultimately, of the
appropriate. The Middle Ages, and later, the 17th c., was a time for
codification, which could slip easily into rules (q.v.). Quintilian's Institutio oratoria argued for such practices, but most important was Horace's Ars poetica (a name given by Quintilian to the Epistula ad Pisones), a text of extraordinary influence bevcause so many later students read the Greeks through Horace's letter (see CLASSICAL POETICS). The attitudes of Horace were often taken as the classical ways.
Party of the irony is that his letter is not particularly original: its
outstanding contribution is the principle of decorum. Aristotle had
referred to the interrelation of style with theme, but in Horace this
combined with the demands of urbanity and propriety to become the
principal emphasis. Tragedy does not babble light verses. Plays ought to
be in five acts, no more and no less, with all bloodiness offstage.
Plunge into epics in medias res (q.v.), but echo the categories
of the strong predecessors either by telling those events or have them
acted out. At this distance, Horace comes through mainly as the exponent
of a set of mind, one who shourely had much to do with later equations
of social and literary decorum. Given his emphasis on "the labor of the
file," he is probably best seen as the ultimate craftsman, completer of
the Classical triumvirate on which genre study built for most of the
rest of Western literary history.
Schlolars are generally agreed that the Middle Ages offered little if
any commentary of permanent value on the theory of genre, and they
usually cite Dante's remarks in De vulgari eloquentia (ca. 1305)
as the major points of interest. In fact though, Dante's account shows a
curious transformation of tradition, especially in his insistence that
his poem is a comedy because it has a happy ending and is written in a
middle style; this sense of "comedy" Dante found in Donatus, De comoedia, and Euanthius, De fabula. Dante argued for a quasi-Horatian decorum of genre and style. In a sense the Commedia culminates medieval mixtures of the grotesque and the sublime (qq.v.), as in the mystery plays (see LITURGICAL DRAMA),
but it also suggests, if unwittingly, an undoing of generic norms that
was to cause much bitter controversy in subsequent approaches.
As though to counter such implicit subversion, the theorists of the Italian Renaissance focused intensely on genre (see RENAISSANCE POETICS); the rediscovery of the Poetics around
1500 became an impetus to codifications such as had never been
conceived even in the most rigorous late Classical formulations. Part of
the intensity came from the wide variety of genres and mixed modes such
as the prosimetrum (q.v.) practiced in the Middle Ages, leading
to the blend of medieval romance (q.v.) and epic in figures such as
Ariosto and Tasso. If there were 16th-c. defenders of these "mixed"
works—among which tragicomedy (q.v.) was surely the most notorious
(Guarini argued in his own defense, but the greatest of the kind were
written in England)—there were codifiers such as Scaliger and
Castelvetro who had considerable influence well into the 18th century.
Out of these theorists came that ultimate codification, the "unities" of time, place, and action (see UNITY), which was finally put to rest only in the 18th. c. by critics such as Samuel Johnson (see NEOCLASSICAL POETICS).
Though they were claimed to have their sources in Aristotle's
categories, in fact these arguments distorted Aristotle and carried
Horatian conservatism to reactionary lengths. French Neoclassicism
continued the codification, quite brilliantly in Boileau's Art poétique, more ambivalently in Corneille's Discours,
the latter an apologia for his dramatic practice which is, at the same
time, an act of support for the unities. Suggestions that Neoclassical
generic hierarchies and standards of decorum have sociopolitical and
philosophical implications are, for the most part, convincing: the
potential analogies among these favorite subjects ensured their mutual
support and offer still another instance of the relations of literature
and power. Yet as both literature and society worked their way into
romanticism (q.v.), most of those hierarchies shifted: in literature the
lyric ascended to the top of the hierarchy, signaling the confirmation
of the triad of lyric, epic (i.e. narrative), and drama which is set
forth by Hegel and still dominates genre theory. Friedrich Schlegel (in
his Dialogue on Poetry [1800] and essay on Goethe [1828]) artued
for the abolition of generic classifications, which would in efffect
eliminate genre. Schlegel and others had in mind the example of
Cervantes, expanding the concept of the novel to speak of it as a
package that could carry all other genres within itself, e.g. ballads
and romances within tales as in Matthew Gregory Lewis's The Monk and, memorably, Poe's Fall of the House of Usher.
International romanticism explored such issues routinely. But when
19th-c. Darwinian biology found application to literature, it produced a
rigidly evolutionary theory of genre in Brunetière and others., a
dead-end whose main value is that it annoyed theorists like Croce, who
considered genres as mere abstractions, useful in the construction of
classifications for practical convenience, but of no value as aesthetic
categories. Thereby it stimulated interest in grenre theory in the 20th
century, one of the great ages of speculation on the subject.
Croce became the case against which theorists tested themselves for much of the early 20th century (see EXPRESSION).
If genre classifications have a certain convenience, they nevertheless
conflict with Croce's conception of the individual work of art as the
product of a unique intuition (q.v.). Genre, in this view, has a merely
nominalist existence, a position echoed in varying ways by later
theorists as significant and different as Jameson and, in one of his
moods, the unclassifiable Frye—though the latter set up an elaborate
system of classification which all commentators have taken as another
way of talking about genre. Todorov's structuralist attack on Frye
resulted in a controversial proposal concerning historical and
theoretical genres, but Frye remains the most important theorist of the
subject since Croce. Scholars like Fowler have argued eloquently for
looser, more historically based readings, recognizing the fact of change
and the necessity for flexibility, while concepts like intertextuality
(q.v.) obviously have much of importance to say about the workings of
genre. Formalists of various persuasions have worried about genre in
terms of form-content relations (see ORGANICISM).
Drawing on the work of Karl Viëtor, Claudio Guillén distinguishes
persuasively between universal modes of experience (lyric, epic, drama)
and genres proper (tragedy or the sonnet). Other recent theorists argue
for the institutional nature of genre for its functions as a series of
codes, and (less convincingly) as an element in a langue-parole
relationship, while Fowler and others, working out of Frye, stress the
significance of the concept of "mode." Still, Jameson's argument that
genre theory has been discredited by modern thinking about literature
seems now largely convincing. Recognition of the embodiment of
literature in the necessary shifting conditions of culture has led a
number of theorists to argue that a genre is whatever a particular text
or time claims it to be. Skepticism about universals has clearly taken
its toll, as have, in other ways, the arguments of Croce. Such
skepticism has appeared among contemporary artists as well, e.g. the
performance artist Laurie Anderson and the composer-writer-performer
John Cage, who pull down all walls of distinction among genres and media
as well as what has been called "high art" and "low art" (Here as
elsewhere sociocultural elements cannot be separated from other facets
of the work.) Terms like "multimedia" and "intermedia" can be
complemented by others such as "intergeneric," such practices denying,
in varying degree, the validity of absolute distinctions, categories,
and hierarchies. Theorizing about genre has not been so vigorous since
the 16th century. The suggestiveness of the 20th century's quite
variegated work makes it a period of extraordinary achievement in the
history of this stubborn, dubious, always controversial concept. For
further discussion of mode and genre see VERSE AND PROSE; see also CANON; CONVENTION; FORM; ORGANICISM; RULES.
JOURNAL: Genre 1— (1968-).
STUDIES: F. Brunetière, L'Evolution des genres. 7th ed. (1922); B. Croce, Aesthetic, tr. D. Ainslie, 2nd ed. (1922); J. Petersen, "Zur Lehre von den Dichtungsgattungen," Festschrift Aug. Sauer (1925); K. Viëtor, "Probleme der literarische Gattungsgeschichte," DVLG 9 (1931), "Die Geschichte der literarischen Gattungen," Geist und Form (1952); R. Bray, Des Genres littéraires (1937); K. Burke, "Poetic Categories." Attitudes toward History (1937); I. Behrens, Die Lehre von der Einteilung der Dichtkunst (1940)—best account of development of genre classification in Western literature; J. J. Donohue, The Theory of Literary Kinds, 2 v. (1943-49)—ancient Greek genre classifications; I. Ehrenpreis, The "Types Approach" to Literature. (1945); C. Vincent, Théorie des genres littéraires,
21st ed. (1951); Abrams, chs. 1, 4. 6; E. Olson, "An Outline of Poetic
Theory," in Crane; A. E. Harvey, "The Classification of Greek Lyric
Poetry." ClassQ n.s. 5 (1955); Wellek and Warren, ch. 17; Frye;
Wimsatt and Brooks; Weinberg, ch. 13; C. F. P. Stutterheim, "Prolegomena
to a Theory of Literary Genres." ZRL 6 (1964); B. K. Lewalski, Milton's Brief Epic (1966), Paradise Lost and the Rhetoric of Literary Forms (1985), ed., Renaissance Genres (1986); F. Séngle, Die literarische Formenlehre (1967); W. V. Ruttkowski, Die literarischen Gattungen (1968)—bibl. with trilingual indices, Bibliographie der Gattungspoetik (1973); E. Staiger, Grundbegriffe der Poetik (1968), tr. J. C. Hudson and L. T. Frank as Basic Concepts of Poetics (1991); K. R. Scherpe, Gattungspoetik im 18 Jh. (1968); E. Vivas, "Literary Classes: Some Problems," Genre 1 (1968); H.-R. Jauss, "Littérature médiévale et théorie des genres," Poétique 1 (1970); T. Todorov, Introduction à la littérature fantastique (1970); Genres in Discourse (tr. 1990); M. Fubini, Entstehung und Geschichte der literarischen Gattungen (1971); C. Guillén, Literature as System (1971), chs. 4-5; P. Hernadi, Beyond Genre (1972); F. Cairns, Generic Composition in Greek and Roman Literature (1972); R. L. Colie, The Resources of Kind: Genre Theory in the Renaissance (1973); K. W. Hempfer, Gattungstheorie (1973);
R. Cohen, "On the Interrelations of 18th-c. Literary Forms," and R. W.
Rader, "The Concept of Genre and 18th-C. Studies," New Approaches to 18th-C. Literature, ed. P. Harth (1974); A. Jolles, Einfache Formen, 5th ed. (1974); G. W. F. Hegel, Aesthetics, tr. T. M. Knox (1975); G. Genette, "Genres, 'types,' modes," Poétique 32 (1977); K. Müller-Dyes, Literarische Gattungen (1978); "Theories of Literary Genre," ed. J. Strelka, special issue of YCC 8 (1978); Special Issue on Genre, Glyph 7 (1980); Special Issue on Genre Theory, Poetics 10, 2-3 (1981); F. Jameson, The Political Unconscious (1981); Fowler—the major modern study; H. Dubrow, Genre (1982); W. E. Rogers, The Three Genres and the Interpretation of Lyric (1983); B. J. Bond, Literary Transvaluation from Vergilian Epic to Shakespearean Tragicomedy (1984); Canons, ed. R. von Hallberg (1984); Discourse and Literature: New Appproaches to the Analysis of Literary Genres, ed. T. A. van Dijk (1984); T. G. Rosenmeyer, "Ancient Literary Genres: A Mirage?" YCGL 34 (1985); Postmodern Genres, ed. M. Perloff (1989).
[By Frederick Garber, T. V. F. Brogan et al.]
jueves, 17 de septiembre de 2020
GENRE
Suscribirse a:
Enviar comentarios (Atom)
1. INTRODUCCIÓN
Bienvenidos a este blog sobre teatro inglés. Los contenidos pueden verse en la columna derecha. Comenzamos por la introducción. Esta unidad,...
-
Bienvenidos a este blog sobre teatro inglés. Los contenidos pueden verse en la columna derecha. Comenzamos por la introducción. Esta unidad,...
-
Notes from Northrop Frye's Anatomy of Criticism From the Third Essay —ARCHETYPAL CRITICISM (THEORY OF MYTHS): The mythos of spring: C...
-
Frame theory has many antecedents in literature and critical thought, but it was explicitly developed by Gregory Bateson and Erving Goffm...
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario