Literary work is a generic term for works of
literature
Literature is any collection of Writing, written work, but it is also used more narrowly for writings specifically considered to be an art form, especially novels, Play (theatre), plays, and poetry, poems. It includes both print and Electroni ...
, i.e. texts such as
fiction
Fiction is any creative work, chiefly any narrative work, portraying character (arts), individuals, events, or setting (narrative), places that are imagination, imaginary or in ways that are imaginary. Fictional portrayals are thus inconsistent ...
and
non-fiction
Non-fiction (or nonfiction) is any document or content (media), media content that attempts, in good faith, to convey information only about the real life, real world, rather than being grounded in imagination. Non-fiction typically aims to pre ...
book
A book is a structured presentation of recorded information, primarily verbal and graphical, through a medium. Originally physical, electronic books and audiobooks are now existent. Physical books are objects that contain printed material, ...
s,
essay
An essay ( ) is, generally, a piece of writing that gives the author's own argument, but the definition is vague, overlapping with those of a Letter (message), letter, a term paper, paper, an article (publishing), article, a pamphlet, and a s ...
s,
screenplay
A screenplay, or script, is a written work produced for a film, television show (also known as a '' teleplay''), or video game by screenwriters (cf. ''stage play''). Screenplays can be original works or adaptations from existing pieces of w ...
s''.''
In the
philosophy of art and the field of
aesthetics
Aesthetics (also spelled esthetics) is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature of beauty and taste (sociology), taste, which in a broad sense incorporates the philosophy of art.Slater, B. H.Aesthetics ''Internet Encyclopedia of Ph ...
there is some debate about what that means, precisely.
What a literary work is can encompass poems, novels, dramas, short stories, sagas, legends, and satires, but in one definition is taken to exclude fact-oriented writing.
In length a literary work can range from short poems to trilogy novels, and in tone from comic verse to tragedy.
What "literary" means
The first question is narrowing down "literature".
Many, from
Jean Paul Sartre through
Hazard Adams to
Laurence Lerner, have written extensively on the subject, it being the focus of entire essays and chapters.
In simple terms, a literary work stands differentiated from, for example, a ''philosophical'' work or a ''scientific'' work, albeit that there is a lot of overlap between the philosophical and the literary.
And there is broad basic agreement amongst modern art philosophers and critics that "literature" does not encompass older meanings of the word, that are considered obsolete.
The plain word has had several meanings over the centuries, having meant both literacy and literary erudition, such as "a man of much literature" meaning someone who is well read or who has a lot of book-learning.
Its more recent meaning of any written work whatsoever is also not how it is popularly understood, as ''literary'' works have some quality that distinguishes them from mere ''written'' works.
Neil and Sarah King leave it at that, an "undefined quality".
But
Peter Lamarque observes that there is more definition than that, with the general popular understanding being that there is a contrast between the ''literary'' and the ''everyday'' that makes certain works "literary works" and others not, inasmuch as the ''literary'' is "more ornate, structured, or self-conscious".
However, Lamarque notes a problem with this populist definition in that it excludes much modern literature that is wholly devoid of ornateness and yet includes works that simply include rhetorical forms somewhere.
Ornate language is not by itself alone a sufficient condition for something qualifying as a literary work.
Lamarque observes that the idea from the 19th century onwards has been that the ''literature'' of literary works covers "works of the imagination", albeit a subset of those and not all.
Publishers do not extend the mantle of ''literature'' to popular fiction, drama, or light verse; and they distinguish ''fiction'' literary works, as a
genre
Genre () is any style or form of communication in any mode (written, spoken, digital, artistic, etc.) with socially agreed-upon conventions developed over time. In popular usage, it normally describes a category of literature, music, or other fo ...
, from
science fiction
Science fiction (often shortened to sci-fi or abbreviated SF) is a genre of speculative fiction that deals with imaginative and futuristic concepts. These concepts may include information technology and robotics, biological manipulations, space ...
,
crime fiction
Crime fiction, detective story, murder mystery, crime novel, mystery novel, and police novel are terms used to describe narratives or fiction that centre on criminal acts and especially on the investigation, either by an amateur or a professiona ...
,
horror fiction
Horror is a genre of speculative fiction that is intended to disturb, frighten, or scare an audience. Horror is often divided into the sub-genres of psychological horror and supernatural horror. Literary historian J. A. Cuddon, in 1984, defin ...
,
fantasy fiction
Fantasy is a genre of speculative fiction that involves supernatural or Magic (supernatural), magical elements, often including Fictional universe, imaginary places and Legendary creature, creatures.
The genre's roots lie in oral traditions, ...
,
war fiction, and
horror fiction
Horror is a genre of speculative fiction that is intended to disturb, frighten, or scare an audience. Horror is often divided into the sub-genres of psychological horror and supernatural horror. Literary historian J. A. Cuddon, in 1984, defin ...
.
Truly problematic cases are exemplified by
Peter Handke
Peter Handke (; born 6 December 1942) is an Austrians, Austrian novelist, playwright, translator, poet, film director, and screenwriter. He was awarded the 2019 Nobel Prize in Literature "for an influential work that with linguistic ingenuity has ...
's poem ''FC Nürnberg'', which comprises a list of names of soccer players, without any rhetoric, ornateness, or even narrative; which makes it difficult to categorize as a literary work at all; and conversely the ''
Bible
The Bible is a collection of religious texts that are central to Christianity and Judaism, and esteemed in other Abrahamic religions such as Islam. The Bible is an anthology (a compilation of texts of a variety of forms) originally writt ...
'' which contains many literary factors but which is not conventionally considered to be a literary work.
Terry Eagleton argues that the category is largely circular: a work is literary because it is subject to literary criticism, and literary criticism only covers literary works.
This roughly coincides with the stance of Lamarque and Stein Haugon Olsen, which is that a literary work becomes a literary work when a ''literary institution'' takes a literary stance towards it, and a literary instutition, in its turn is a "rule-governed practice" whose rules determine what a literary stance is and how literary works are treated aesthetically.
Lamarque states that literary works "are not 'natural kinds' but instutitional entities determined by social norms."
John Martin Ellis observed in the 1970s that it had "become quite common for critics and theorists alike to raise the question, only to go on and assert that we all know what we mean by literature even if we cannot define it".
John Searle
John Rogers Searle (; born July 31, 1932) is an American philosopher widely noted for contributions to the philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and social philosophy. He began teaching at UC Berkeley in 1959 and was Willis S. and Mario ...
also concluded in the 1970s that "there is no trait or set of traits which all works of literature have in common and which could constitute the necessary and sufficient conditions for being a work of literature".
What constitutes a "work"
Usually a literary work involves a
text
Text may refer to:
Written word
* Text (literary theory)
In literary theory, a text is any object that can be "read", whether this object is a work of literature, a street sign, an arrangement of buildings on a city block, or styles of clothi ...
, although views vary on exactly how; and some argue that literary works are not necessarily even textual at all, as they can also encompass oral literature.
One postmodern view is that a literary work is reductibly a text; a "mere string of sentences".
Lamarque's formalism of this view is that a text is "an ordered set of sentence-types individuated at least partly by semantic and syntactic properties".
Stefán Snævarr explains that this view is, in its most reductionst form, irrespective of whether the text is fiction or factual: the semantics of the sentences are irrelevant.
"''
Anna Karenina''" he says, "would not cease to be a literary fictional narrative even though by chance every single sentence in the novel happened to be true".
However, Lamarque and others argue that that is insufficient, as this removes the author from the picture, and the author, in particular the intent of the author, matters in order to comprehend the work.
Context matters, in other words.
A literary work is not just some abstraction, a sequence of words, but an utterance made by an author whose historical and other circumstances are vital to its understanding.
The full Lamarquian view makes a distinctiction between the physical embodiment of a work (e.g. an actual physical book copy), the text, the work, and its interpretation.
Thomas Leddy disagrees with the text-work dualism, calling it the ''myth of the text''.
In Leddy's view, there is a class of physical objects that are copies of the work, not necessarily exact copies but fair copies of the primary one, usually the author's original manuscript; with translations, abridgements, collections of fragments of lost original manuscripts, and collections of closely related manuscripts derived from a lost original, all being ''variations'' of this class.
Leddy by 2016 had developed his stance to argue that "I now think that texts are ontologically mythical. I have never seen such things and I am not even sure what they would look like.".
Leddy categorizes this disagreement with Lamarque as one of how one defines the equivalence relation for two things being the same literary work.
The Lamarquian view hinges on two texts being identical "if they have the same semantic and syntactic properties, are in the same language, and consist of the same word-types and sentence-types ordered in the same way".
Peter Swirski calls this simple structural equivalence ''localism'', in artistic criticism in general, and ''textualism'' specifically for literary criticism, and points to
Monroe C. Beardsley's 1946 "The Intentional Fallacy" as amongst one of its greatest inflences (as well as a foundation for
New Criticism
New Criticism was a Formalism (literature), formalist movement in literary theory that dominated American literary criticism in the middle decades of the 20th century. It emphasized close reading, particularly of poetry, to discover how a work of l ...
).
The Leddy view is that two literary works can be textually identical, word for word, and yet be different literary works if they were "written by different persons at two different times without one having knowledge of the other"; the textual identity being a simple happenstance.
This is a point that Lamarque also supports, but argues that the differentiation comes from appreciation of authorial and historical context, which is external to the notion of a text.
From this Leddy argues that the entire notion of a text is superfluous, as everything that can be said about ''texts'' can also be said about ''works''.
Swirski observes that
deconstruction
In philosophy, deconstruction is a loosely-defined set of approaches to understand the relationship between text and meaning. The concept of deconstruction was introduced by the philosopher Jacques Derrida, who described it as a turn away from ...
has not done away with textualism, with later textualist critics making self-contradictory statements about appreciating "literary texts", when the whole reductionist idea of a text is that it has no attributes of influence, genre, or originality, which textualists hold apply to the ''work'' rather than to the text.
One of Leddy's problems with the Lamarquian view is Lamarque's own recognition of a problem identified by Beardsley: a 1744 poem (quoted at right) where the words of the poem alone allow, when it is reduced to a text, for the word "
plastic
Plastics are a wide range of synthetic polymers, synthetic or Semisynthesis, semisynthetic materials composed primarily of Polymer, polymers. Their defining characteristic, Plasticity (physics), plasticity, allows them to be Injection moulding ...
" to be read, anachronistically, as referencing modern
plastic
Plastics are a wide range of synthetic polymers, synthetic or Semisynthesis, semisynthetic materials composed primarily of Polymer, polymers. Their defining characteristic, Plasticity (physics), plasticity, allows them to be Injection moulding ...
, even though that is a nonsense that cannot match any possible 18th century authorial intent.
Leddy argues that dispensing with the idea of a dualism between ''work'' and ''text'' removes this problem entirely.
"In fact, there is no text at all." he states.
Literary works (and indeed other works of art) are, in his view, the physical objects, not derived from abstractions like texts.
A book, its text, and the literary work are all just three ways of referencing one thing, according to need.
See also
*
Lost literary work
A lost literary work (referred throughout this article just as a lost work) is a document, literary work, or piece of multimedia, produced of which no surviving copies are known to exist, meaning it can be known only through reference, or liter ...
References
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{{refend
Literary works