Neo-appreciation pedagogy [electronic resource] : the pragmatics of reading aesthetic affect in the undergraduate classroom /
Abstract (Summary)
This dissertation offers collegiate literary instructors a theoretical foundation
and pedagogical method for teaching their students how to analyze aesthetic
affect: a theory and practice termed here “neo?appreciation pedagogy.” While
the dissertation outlines a general theory of literary reading, it only does so to
provide the basis for classroom methods that directly confront archaic, text?immanent
models of meaning production. While preserving much of the method and terminology
of the traditional literary classroom, neo?appreciation pedagogy offers
students an overt admission that literary study is at least partially a transmission
of particular cultural biases; however, it also teaches them ways to critique
those cultural biases, beginning with their own responses to “great” literature.
In other words, neo?literary appreciation pedagogy seeks to teach students why
certain cultural artifacts have been valued in the past (particularly works which
they themselves typically do not value) by expanding their repertoire of reading
or “lectical” strategies.
In pursuit of this goal, this dissertation outlines a taxonomy of conventional
reading strategies simple enough to teach to undergraduate students. This
taxonomy is articulated into a heuristic ? “the lectical triangle” ? used to
teach students first how to analyze the lectical strategies they already use
then how to deploy those and other lectical strategies (with which they may
be less familiar) in increasingly sophisticated ? i.e. academic ? ways. Building
upon post?structuralist, linguistic theory and American Pragmatism in general
(along with significant elaboration s upon the work of Wolfgang Iser and Wayne
Booth in particular, lectical analysis helps students explore how different textual
patterns can “invite” certain lectical responses and only “tolerate” or even
“resist” others while never requiring any particular response. Neo?appreciation
pedagogy, therefore, does not seek to reinforce conventional or canonical readings
of literary works, much less reproduce any particular aesthetic affect; instead,
it seeks to give students the tools to understand the lectical conventions
by which such works have been valued in the past, while giving them more lectical
resources for readings they might perform in the future.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Texas at Austin
School Location:USA - Texas
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:literature pragmatism in
ISBN:
Date of Publication: