Analyzing literature through a lens

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Presentation transcript:

Analyzing literature through a lens Marxist and Feminist Lenses There are many critical frameworks we should use to interpret literature, film, art, drama, music, or anything you experience. Two of the most useful and relevant frameworks are Marxist literary criticism and Feminist literary criticism. These lenses add insights into our lives and into the media you are experiencing. See note on slide 14 about the term bitchy before you display this slide show. This slide show was retrieved from Slide Share: https://www.slideshare.net/kerryhayes/marxist-and-feminist-lenses-2014 Published on Mar 19, 2014 Posted by: kerryhayes

Marxist Lens Essential Questions: → How does money matter/function in this piece? → How does a power system matter/function in this piece? Named after Karl Marx, but not promoting communism, this lens helps us examine how socioeconomic factors influence the characters, plot, setting, reader/viewer, author/maker, time period, or any other aspect of an exhibit.

HARRY POTTER These two opposing classes, the Mudbloods and the Purebloods, are representative of the Proletariat and Bourgeoisie. The amount of magical skill a witch, wizard or Muggle possesses represents the amount of “property” a citizen owns.

Karl Marx said that human history can be studied best by looking at how the proletariat (lower, working classes; blue-collar jobs) interacts with the bourgeoisie (the middle/upper classes; white- collar jobs). Louis Althusser added to this theoretical/ critical approach. His term “interpellation” helps us examine how we are convinced by our oppressive systems to keep doing the miserable work we do for the system (because what is good for the system leads to good conditions for the individual— which, we know is not always the case). Althusser explored how ideological state apparatuses (ISAs) control and sculpt: family, church, work, law, school, arts, sciences…

What Marxist critics do: 1. Make a division between the “overt” (manifest or surface) and “covert” (latent or hidden) content of a literary work 2. Relate the context of a work to the social-class status of the author 3. Explain the nature of a whole literary genre in terms of the social period which “produced” it 4. Relate the literary work to the social assumptions of the time in which it is “consumed” (or read, viewed…) 5. Look for symbols that create or reveal an “individual versus exploitive system” theme “oppressive culture” theme “individual as dehumanized, mechanized, roboticized, zombiefied—only serving the larger cause; only producing for ‘greater good’” theme 6. Evaluate the systems of, in, around, about, near the exhibit

Questions Marxist critics ask: 1. How do social classes interact with each other? Is there greed? 2. Do any characters climb the “social/economic ladder”? Why? How? 3. Is a system oppressive to its members? Does the system exploit its members? 4. Are there social tensions? Are the ruling classes happy? Are the lower classes miserable? Or, are the lower classes actually happier because they are not as oppressed by their upper/ruling class rigid rule system? 5. Are the lower/working classes exploited? Does capitalism have a conscience concerning its citizens who are helpless, hopeless, powerless? 6. Are characters given more/less freedom by their class? 7. Are any of the characters “suffocated” by their class rules, codes, & costs? 8. How do “uppers”/”winners” flaunt or exploit their wealth or power?

Key terms in marxist literary theory base superstructure proletariat bourgeoisie class interpellation class mobility oppression ideology ideological state apparatus meritocracy money = power, influence, freedom, happiness, opportunity Publications that fit under a Marxist lens nicely: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest Robots To Kill a Mockingbird Monsters, Inc. Antz 1984 The Lion King Star Trek Star Wars Office Space The Matrix Trilogy Harry Potter Series The Time Machine Titanic

Feminist critical lens Essential Questions: → How does gender matter/function in this piece? → How are women portrayed/depicted in this piece? This lens helps us examine how gender is a factor in a piece. The main focus is on how women are portrayed, how they function, behave, are limited/privileged for being women. However, we also examine how maleness defines roles & limits men.

The Lion king THROUGH THE FEMINIST LENS: Helpless females Females provide food and care for the young yet males have ALL the power Nala is stronger than Simba, but she does not inherit the crown

What feminist critics do 1. Rethink the canon—the accepted “greats” of all-time—to include women authors, poets, directors, actors 2. Examine representations of women in literature and film by male and female authors & moviemakers 3. Challenge representations of women as “other,” as “lack,” as part of “nature” (whereas men are part of “culture” and better than “natural” or “emotional”) 4. Raise the question of whether men and women are “essentially” different because of biology, or are socially constructed as different (subjugating women as “worse” than men in the important ways)

Questions feminist critics ask: 1. Are there “natural” roles men and women fill? 2. To what extent are our roles created by culture? Nature vs. nurture 3. Who puts limitations on genders? 4. Who grants privileges to a gender? 5. Examines these two statements: A “woman” is/has ______________ (adjective, image, trait, ability…) A “man” is/has _______________ (adjective, image, trait, ability…) 6. Should we scrap our created gender roles and stereotypes? 7. How does a creator’s gender affect a piece? 8. What are the social expectations of men and women in this piece? 9. Are the social norms different for men and women? 10. How does society value men and women differently? What about men is valued? What about women is valued?

Key terms in feminist literary theory: subjugate “other” gender roles hegemony oppression gender expectations exploitation relative meaning

Degrading language system created by male-dominated power structure   Women Men (describing the same behavior) negative positive connotations chick = dude &itchy = tough slut/whore = stud (just) cute = cool ditzy = stoic, quiet crazy = temper NOTE: &itchy denotes bitchy. You may not be comfortable with that item, but the topic is important.

Biological limitations: Have women been encouraged to use their minds more than men because men get more respect for being physical rather than mental? Are girls “better” students than boys? Why? Yet, why do boys speak more in class discussions?

Pieces that fit under Feminist Lens: Harry Potter Twilight Unforgiven (or any cowboy story) Office Space 1984 Juno The Lion King To Kill a Mockingbird Titanic Dukes of Hazzard Ocean’s 11 Million Dollar Baby The Reader The Odyssey The Ugly Truth 300 P.S. I Love You Superbad The Hangover the circus No Country for Old Men Mulan The Road Book of Eli Lady Gaga perfume ads