What is literature?
The quest to discover a definition for
“literature” is a road that is much
travelled, though the point of arrival,
if ever reached, is seldom
satisfactory. Most attempted
definitions are broad and vague, and
they inevitably change over time. In
fact, the only thing that is certain
about defining literature is that the
definition will change. Concepts of
what is literature change over time
as well. What may be considered
ordinary and not worthy of comment
in one time period may be
considered literary genius in
another. Initial reviews of Emily
Brontë's Wuthering Heights in 1847
were less than spectacular, however,
Wuthering Heights is now
considered one of the greatest
literary achievements of all time.
The same can be said for Herman
Melville's Moby-Dick (1851).
Generally, most people have their
own ideas of what literature is.
When enrolling in a literary course at
university, you expect that
everything on the reading list will
be “literature”. Similarly, you might
expect everything by a known
author to be literature, even though
the quality of that author's work may
vary from publication to publication.
Perhaps you get an idea just from
looking at the cover design on a
book whether it is “literary” or
“pulp”. Literature then, is a form of
demarcation, however fuzzy, based
on the premise that all texts are not
created equal. Some have or are
given more value than others.
Most forays into the question of
“what is literature” go into how
literature works with the reader,
rather than how the author set about
writing it. It is the reception, rather
than the writing, which is the object
of enquiry. Largely, what we call
“literature” is often a subjective
value judgment, and naturally, value
judgments, like literary tastes, will
change.
Etymologically, literature has to do
with letters, the written as opposed
to the spoken word, though not
everything that is written down is
literature. As a classification, it
doesn't really have any firm
boundary lines. The poet Shelley
wanted to include some legislative
statutes of parliaments under poetry
because they created order and
harmony out of disorder. There is
recurring agreement amongst
theorists though that for a work to
be called literature must display
excellence in form and style.
Something may also be literary by
association – that is, because V.S.
Naipaul is a literary figure through
his novels, his private letters are
passed as literature as well.
There is also general agreement that
literature foregrounds language, and
uses it in artistic ways. Terry
Eagleton goes some way towards a
definition of literature and its
relationship to language: “Literature
transforms and intensifies ordinary
language, deviates systematically
from everyday speech”. Just as
architecture is the art form that
arises out of the human ability to
create buildings, literature is the art
form that arises out of the human
ability to create language.
The common definition of literature,
particularly for university courses, is
that it covers the major genres of
poetry, drama, and novel/fiction. The
term also implies literary quality and
distinction. This is a fairly basic view
of literature because, as mentioned
in the introduction, the meaning of
the term has undergone changes,
and will no doubt continue to do so.
Most contemporary literary histories
show a shift from the belles-lettres
tradition, which was concerned with
finding beauty, an elevated use of
language, emotional effects and
moral sentiments before something
could be called literature.
The three main ways of approaching
a definition of literature are
relativism, subjectivism and
agnosticism. With relativism, there
are no value distinctions in
literature; anything may be called
good literature. Subjectivism, as the
term implies, means that all theories
of literary value are subjective, and
that literary evaluation is a purely
personal matter. Agnosticism follows
from subjectivism, though it argues
that though there may be real
distinctions in literary value, our
subjective value systems prevent us
from knowing anything about the
real values.
By the 1980s, there
was a sense of
inclusiveness (and
relativism) in what
was termed literary
that ran alongside
the inclusiveness of
multiculturalism -
anything could be
literature, and
attempts were
made to dismantle
distinctions between high and low
culture. Letters, diaries, reports,
petitions, journals and essays as well
as the traditional genres of novel,
short story, poem and play can be
included as literature. In
universities, literature began to be
studied for issues and themes, and
works were valued for their ideas
and engagement with the world as
much as for their aesthetic qualities.
These standards are also applied to
non-fiction, such as auto/biography
and philosophy. The most recent
amendment to what constitutes
literature is the inclusion of oral
narratives. This inclusion hasn't been
without debate. There is some
argument that the written word
lends itself more easily to analysis,
while the flip side is that oral
narratives are a legitimate part of a
culture's literary capital.
Definitions of literature change
because they describe and clarify a
reality, they do not create the reality
they describe. Or it may be that
definitions tell us what we ought to
think literature should be. At a
dinner party you would be swiftly
corrected if you referred to Mills &
Boon as literature. This might occur
for two reasons: the common
perception of literature as described
by current definitions doesn't
include mass-market romance
novels; or Mills & Boon might well be
literature, but contemporary
definitions tell us it shouldn't be.
Does it really matter what
“literature” is? Does everyone have
to agree? Because there is no hard
and fast definition of literature,
perhaps it is more beneficial to seek
an analysis instead. What purposes
does literature serve? What
distinguishes literature from non-
literary works? What makes us treat
something as literature? How do we
know when something is literature?
Would it be easier to ask “what isn't
literature”?
Literature is as literature does. In
exploring ideas about what
literature is, it is useful to look at
some of the things that literature
does. Literature is something that
reflects society, makes us think
about ourselves and our society,
allows us to enjoy language and
beauty, it can be didactic, and it
reflects on “the human condition”. It
both reflects ideology and changes
ideology, just like it follows generic
conventions as well as changing
them. It has social and political
effects: just ask Salman Rushdie or
Vladamir Nabakov. Literature is the
creation of another world, a world
that we can only see through
reading literature.
Posted at 2015-05-04
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