Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Elizabeth Hardwicks Criticism of Washington Square :: Elizabeth Hardwick Washington Square

Elizabeth Hardwicks Criticism of Washington satisfyingAristotle said that art was one step a management from life, and critique was one step away from that. So what does that make a criticism of a criticism? Carry the one, divide by a and move the decimal fraction pointI dont know, I was never that good at math, but it seems like we may need to drop bread crumbs like Hansel and Gretel to find our way back to the original text. I enjoy criticism, some clippings for the purpose of learning something new and (factual and) exciting that I origin onlyy wasnt aware of in the text. Sometimes it is nevertheless fun to see where the critics academic flight of fancy has taken them. Sometimes, and this is often true, a cigar is just a cigarElizabeth Hardwicks (wasnt that Raleighs wifes name?) article On Washington Square cant seem to decide whether it is fish or fowl the reader has a hard time distinguishing between plot and character summary, New Historicist, Psychoanalytical, Formalist and all separate manner of criticism. Nothing, I think was anything shockingly original or eye-opening, leaving me feeling that it was actually more review than actual literary criticism. Hardwick dances from discipline to discipline throughout the course of the article, leaving the reader feeling spun every which way, swinging for a piata that isnt even there. Interdisciplinary criticism is not necessarily a bad thing but, in two and-a half full pages of writing, the reader is given a whirlwind tour of too many subjects. She moves from an historical description of the time and setting of Washington Square to physical and psychological character summaries to a suggestion that the character of Austin Sloper may be Jamess portrayal of his brother William to a relatively long passage on the perfect balance and the source of the novel. Everything that was said was a complete thought, but there was no meat to the selective information it was like gnawing on a soup bone while all you real ly want is a nice roast.Actually, Hardwicks article was not at all faulty, just dry and altogether too short for the knowledge that it was trying to impart. It could have been three or four times longer and given sizable attention to each point.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.