Emily Schmitt
ENG 280
Natalie M. Philips
10/16/12
Weekly
Response #8
Ryan and Rivkin: “Rather,
literature is in the first instance a social phenomenon, and as such, it cannot
be studied independently of the social relations, the economic forms, and the
political realities of the time in which it was written.” (Ryan and Rivikin
644.)
Pride and Prejudice: “If I can but
see one of my daughters happily settled at Netherfeild, “said Mrs. Bennet to
her husband, “and all the others equally well married, I shall have nothing to
wish for.” (Austen 48.)
Question: How important is not just
the setting of literature, but its context in its interpretation?
This is perhaps a half-hearted
question to put forth, but I could not think of any better way to phrase what I
wanted to say, which is that I believe the context of literature is just as
important, if not more so, than the setting of the story itself. Just as
setting is important, context is also. Quite frankly I was flabbergasted to
find that there were people who didn’t think so. Of course the political and
social happenings of the time had an impact on what was written, and of course
it is important to understand those happenings so that we, studying the literature
now, can better understand what the author had initially intended. I do not
really care that it is possible to analyze text without its context; the point
is that before you do so it is imperative that you understand what the author was
initially trying to do. The context and social ideas of the time it was written
or became popular are immensely important in determining that. The example I
use from P&P demonstrates this in the idea of marriage. Initially reading
this quote, as a woman in the twenty first century, my sensibilities as a woman
with equal rights and aspirations to man were offended. However when taken into
consideration the time period that this was written and the social and
political norms of the time, it is better understood to me that Mrs. Bentley
might not just be a horrible woman who doesn’t believe herself or other women
capable of anything more, and more of a mother who desperately wants her
daughters to become what she see’s as ultimately ‘successful’.
Emily,
ReplyDeleteGreat posts so far. Looking forward to your responses to readings for this week and last.