Saturday, November 30, 2013

Perspectivizing Aesthetics of Literature



A reader, while studying a text, feels thrilled, transported, at varying intervals. This experience involves two things: the first is  beauty caused by the creative use of language, known as aesthetic beauty  and the second is pleasure caused by the beauty known as aesthetic pleasure which is  experienced by the  reader. The reader experiences this pleasure in two ways – haphazardly as a layman has it and methodically as a trained man does. The former has its worth as vague or even confused while the latter remains accounted for. It is the latter mode which requires aesthetic  tools to analyze and relish literature.

Some scholars hold that to relish literature, there is no need of aesthetic tools.  They raise  inevitable questions like : why cannot we enjoy a piece of literature? Why must we spoil the fun by criticizing? Such scholars are of the opinion that the aesthetic tools hamper aesthetic experience because the reader is lost in a mechanical enquiry. This objection, no doubt, has a logic for one who is not a trained reader  or who is not used to applying such tools to a literary piece. But for a trained reader this objection has no value because for him such an application to a piece of literature is not a mechanical task but an assimilative act of reading and enjoying that piece of literature.

 Furthermore, to answer the inevitable questions, raised above, Peter Berry says that the enjoyment of literary art, no doubt,  is simple but  the greatest enjoyment of literary art is never simple. For the latter we need to have critical tools.  Perhaps T S Eliot had this notion in his mind when he said “ that criticism is as inevitable as breathing”, and we should be none the worse for articulating what passes in our minds when we read a book and feel an emotion about it. Nothing  replaces the reader’s initial felt responses: the sound of poetry on both the outer and inner ear; the visions of fiction in the mind’s eye; the kinesthetic assault of “total theatre.” But human responses seldom remain dead level: they reverberate through multiple planes of sensibility, impelled towards articulation—in short towards criticism. It may be subjective  as well as objective (critical). For the  fullest appreciation of literature,  we need to have critical tools. Their  knowledge is not a deterrent to the enjoyment of literature. On the contrary the application of such tools can enhance the pleasure that the common reader can derive from a piece of literature.

Let us illustrate the argument with an analogy. Think of the premier shows in which mostly   the actors and the artists of cinema are the audience. They are  thoroughly informed on the history of moviemaking; they know both classic and contemporary films; they understand the technical operations of the cinema and its myriad effects; they are familiar with acting styles, past and present. While watching a    movies, they  receive the same impressions on the level of  sense experience,  as the other audience. But because of their special knowledge, they comprehend what they witness. Their knowledge does not dim their pleasure; it does not nullify any pre-critical or amateur response. 


There is one more pause in relation to the use of theory. The scholars hold that  a marked awareness of theory  took place  during the last quarter of the twentieth century when the writers, critics, linguists, philosophers, and stylisticians all had become conscious of the role of theory. The result came in the form of  formalism, new criticism, stylistics, structuralism, post structuralism, ,deconstruction, discourse analysis, semiotics and dialogic criticism. In a word, according to them, it was   the high-water mark of theories.  To them now it is over with the titles like After Theory (Thomas Docherty, 1990), ‘Post Theory’ (Nicholas Tredell, in The Critical Decade, 1993).  They  hold that that ‘the moment of theory’ is over. And so there is no need  of talking about theory. But the present academic scenario both in the east and the  west seem to unfold the fact. No doubt the ‘moment of theory’  is but the ‘hour of theory’ has come as  theory has become a part of curriculum. Now it is not the business of minority rather it has become the business of majority of people to learn and teach theory. So without any pause the use of theory is  relevant and would be so in future  as it has been in the past.


Today there are number of names used for this genre of literature. By  the  students of literature, aesthetics is taken to be as literary criticism  poetics, literary theory, critical approach etc..  Sometimes they, due to ignorance, confuse the terms with one another and they tend to use these terms interchangeably. In fact, aesthetics, poetics, literary criticism,  literary theory, approach etc  are not synonymous , though there  is relationship among them. They can be understood on the basis of their range.

Poetics is the  legislative criticism or art of writing poetry or the study of linguistic technique in poetry or literature. It is a form of critical endeavour which lays down rules for the art of writing, largely based on standard works of literature.  It is  related to the possibilities of the creative use of language at different levels  of a literary text. Its  range is restricted to a text or an author. Elizabethan criticism, except Philip Sidney, and a large part of 18th c criticism are of this order.

As far as literary theory is concerned, it is aesthetical criticism or  philosophy of literature which probes the nature of art in general and literature in particular. It does many things apart from helping the reader to reach at the meaning of a text. It is a set of broad assumptions about literature and function of criticism. The range of  literary theory is very wide which includes many subtle questions such as how a work of art is produced, how it ought to be read. What are the conditions in which the meaning is produced? How does a work of art mean what it means? What effects does a work of art produce in the mind of the reader? Does the subjectivity of the reader contribute to the meaning of art? Is meaning an objective reality? Who is a poet? Who is a reader? Is there any relationship of the poet belated with the precursor  poet? Is there any relationship between the writer and the  reader? It  includes  function of literature, poet’s nature and  experience of reader, relationship between the reader and the poet. Its range  is very wide which includes metaphysical, psychological, epistemic, logical and critical points of view.  Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus, Coleridge, Walter Pater, Oscar Wilde, I A Richards and others belong to this order.

Critical approach is related to descriptive criticism which concerned with methodology or with the varying ways in which art of literature or works of literature can be profitably discussed. It is a study of individual writers and their works , their aims, methods and effects. Ben Jonson and Wordsworth belong to this order. Much of English criticism is of this nature.    

Aesthetics means science and philosophy of fine arts. The problem of aesthetics  includes two aspects of fine arts-- the technique of fine arts and  the theory or  philosophy or theory of fine arts. The  technical point of view of the problem of aestheticism is  related to the possibilities of the creative use of language at different levels  of a literary text. Its  range is restricted to a text or an author. The philosophy or theory  of fine art, involved  in the function of literature, in poet’s nature and in the experience of aesthetic pleasure of reader/spectator,  is the theoretical side of  aesthetics. Its range  is very wide which includes metaphysical, psychological, epistemic, logical and critical points of view. In the West the  hedonistic,  moralistic or pedagogic and  philosophical theories  represent the study of the problem from the point of view of the end of art;  the theories of  imitation, illusion, and idealized representation  represent a study from the point of view of the artist; and  the theories of confused cognition, inference and mysticism represent a study of the problem from the point of view of the reader/spectator/aesthete.

In Sanskrit, the most common name  for poetics is alaṁkāra śāstra. Here the keyword is alaṁkāra which, with the first constituent alam, is to be understood on the authority of Agnipuraṇa as a synonym of the brahma. When we say  that a piece of fine art is alaṁkṛt, we mean that it is informed of the (cognition potential of) the brahma. Three have been attempts to displace the word alaṁkāra from the seminality of poetics due to its limitations imposed on it by the word decoration or poetic figure.

Another important name used of Indian poetics is kāvyaśastra, which like mimaṁsā, (which is the science of the Vedic sentence)is the science of the poetic or literary sentence (text). Here kāvya is poetic sentence or poetry or literature and sāstra is science of this sentence. It was Bhamaha who first used the word kāvya and accordingly the name kāvyaśāstra for Indian poetics was used. Poetic sentence  is a flow whose source is  the writer and whose sink is the reader. In the benedictory of  his Locana on Ananadavardhana’s Dhvanyāloka , Abhinavagupta puts this in the following way:”The duo of the poet and the receiver constitutes the unit of the itness of Saraswati.” 

There is yet another popular  name for Indian poetics used is saundaryasāstra. It has its interesting journey. Vāmana was first to use saundarya (beauty) for alaṁkāra in his Kāvyālaṁkārasūtra. Later Abhinavgupta used the words sunder and sundarya in his descriptions of poetry in his Locana on the Dhvanyāloka. Thereafter Kuntaka used the word camatakara in the sense of  beauty.  Then after a long gap  the sūtra, satyam (the truth), śivam (the good) sundaram (the beautiful) was used in the world of art and literature in 18th century. This was the central sutra of  English  Romanticism. The followers of Brahmo Samaj were influenced by English Romantics.  According to Kavi Gulab Rai this sutra was first used by Raja Rama Mohan Rai , the founder of Brahmo Samaj and later it was used  by Devendranath Tagore.

Simultaneously in 18th Baumgarten used  the word aesthetics, borrowing from Greek, in his doctorate thesis for the first time as the name of a special science. From the Hegelian point of view it means “Philosophy of fine arts” From popular use of the word it seems to mean a theory of beautiful in general, whether in art or nature. Perhaps because of this development  there was good chance for saundarya sāstra, which would correspond to the western name aesthetics, for Sanskrit poetics.

Let me explain aesthetics in a layman’s words. A particular language constitutes the bodily form of poetry, the I-ness of poetry being free from this exterior just as the I-ness of life (ātmān) is free from this exterior physicality of the bodily form (śarīra). This I-ness of poetry is the sense of wonder, a special experience of pleasure. This pleasure is called brahma in Vedanta and by various other names in various other Indian systems of philosophy.  Here it is noteworthy that this variformity of the naming process is not in contradiction to mutual identity while being in oppositional compatibility. That is why in Indian context the school of fine arts are known as : i)Rasa-Brahma-vāda (school dealing with the experience of absolute in literature)ii). Nād-Brahma-vāda(school dealing with the experience of absolute in music. iii) Vastu-Brahma-vāda(school dealing with the experience of absolute in architecture). This I-ness can further be understood as rasagatasaundarya  (experience caused by aesthetic sentiment)  alaṁkāragatasaundarya (experience caused by figures), rītigatasaundarya (experience caused by style), dhvanigatasaundarya (experience caused by suggestion), vakroktigatasaundarya (experience caused by oblique expression) and aucityagatasaundarya (experience caused by propriety). Accordingly they are different theories, the theory of   rasa  (aesthetic sentiment)  the theory of alaṁkāra (figures), the theory of rīti (style), the theory of dhvani (suggestion), the theory of vakrokti (oblique expression) and the theory of aucitya (propriety). 

Keeping all this  account in view we should use aesthetic tools  to analyze and relish literature. The richness of great literature merits correspondingly rich responses—responses that may be reasoned as well as felt. Corollary to  this conviction is our belief that such responses come best when the reader appreciates a great work at various levels of linguistic turns and  from as many  perspective as it legitimately opens itself to. And  it all requires aesthetic tools.

 Here is one precaution  regarding the use of  critical tools. The critical tools are not the final mapping to make an assessment of a piece of literature. They are just reference points which we can modify, in which we can deletion and addition in accordance with the form of the text. No doubt, we have theories to make an assessment of a piece of literature written in any language. But we do not have modern terminology. So for a successful application we have to be little careful about the modern terminology.  applied  Let me explain it in other way. In life there are  always  three models that operate in one way or the other at varying intervals: the first is  the ideal model of things which tells how the things ought to  be; the second is the existing model of things which tells how the things are /were; and the third model is  the functional model of things  which tells how the things  are said or thought to be. Now the question is: Where do these models come from? The first model comes from our Shastras/Dharma and this model works as a reference point. The second comes from our life in action which is put to test of the ideal model and the third is a proposed model to be used. Among these three models, the model given by the Shastras/Dharma  is very important because it is a reference point. But it should be remembered that this ideal model is not to be followed as such. It is just to facilitate us for modifying our existing model of life. If the  modified/existing model does not work properly, it is not the fault of the ideal model. The fault lies with those who fail to visualize the spirit of the ideal model, who fail to visualize time, the circumstances in which the modified model was to be used. What is needed is the recognition that its interpretation is not to be done using a dictionary alone, we need to apply our minds and try to understand what our aestheticians mean. The debate between the scholars  for and against the use of theory  will then be revealed to be artificial and inconsequential.