Reader Response is a literary criticism technique that helps the reader better understand the text and the world around them. Reader Response critics can sum up their analysis by answering this question: What is the reading process, and what happens during it (Bressler, Literary Criticism An Introduction To theory and Practice, page 62)? ... David Bleich, founder of "subjective criticism (Bressler, Literary Criticism An Introduction To Theory and Practice, page 68), explains that a reader's personal response to the text is not the same as an interpretation. ... The Reader Response lit...
Literary critics tend to speculate that Sons and Lovers was written by Lawrence as somewhat of an autobiography centering Paul's life around his own. Whether or not this is true will never be determined, though it will continue to remain a favorite topic for critical analysis for years to come. ...
A Married Woman's True Love Brief excerpt of the poem: It is true love because I do not resent watching the Green Bay Packers Even though I am philosophically opposed to football, It is true love because If his mother was drowning and I was drowning and he had to choose one of use to save, He...
This becomes apparent not so much through a study of her character, but through an analysis of her interaction or "merry war" with Bene*censored*. ... The true relationship of Beatrice and Bene*censored* compared to the relationship of Claudio and Hero, gives the reader not only a better understanding of the power of the literary foil, but also a foil into which that reader can reflect and better understand himself....
Janie's experience underneath the pear tree affects her views of love and her decisions for the rest of her life. Hurston uses words and phrases like: virginity, gold, panting breath, sanctum of a bloom, arch to meet the love embrace, and frothing in delight, all of which are connected to sexual experience. Janie has reached a developmental stage where she is now curious about sex and love. This one experience of Janie's observing the pear tree causes her to question where, when, and how the beautiful things she saw will happen to her. This scene sets up what Janie thinks lov...