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Genre

Genre (from French genre 'kind, or sort'[1]) is any form or type of communication in any mode (written, spoken, digital, artistic, etc.) with socially-agreed-upon conventions developed over time.[2] In popular usage, it normally describes a category of literature, music, or other forms of art or entertainment, whether written or spoken, audio or visual, based on some set of stylistic criteria, yet genres can be aesthetic, rhetorical, communicative, or functional. Genres form by conventions that change over time as cultures invent new genres and discontinue the use of old ones.[3] Often, works fit into multiple genres by way of borrowing and recombining these conventions. Stand-alone texts, works, or pieces of communication may have individual styles, but genres are amalgams of these texts based on agreed-upon or socially inferred conventions. Some genres may have rigid, strictly adhered-to guidelines, while others may show great flexibility.

Genre began[clarification needed] as an absolute classification system for ancient Greek literature, as set out in Aristotle's Poetics.[4] For Aristotle, poetry (odes, epics, etc.), prose, and performance each had specific design features that supported appropriate content of each genre. Speech patterns for comedy would not be appropriate for tragedy, for example, and even actors were restricted to their genre under the assumption that a type of person could tell one type of story best.

Genres proliferate and develop beyond Aristotle's classifications in response to changes in audiences and creators.[5] Genre has become a dynamic tool to help the public make sense out of unpredictability through artistic expression. Given that art is often a response to a social state, in that people write, paint, sing, dance, and otherwise produce art about what they know about, the use of genre as a tool must be able to adapt to changing meanings.

Musician Ezra LaFleur argues that discussion of genre should draw from Ludwig Wittgenstein's idea of family resemblance.[6] Genres are helpful labels for communicating but do not necessarily have a single attribute that is the essence of the genre.

Visual arts

 
A genre painting (Peasant Dance, c. 1568, by Pieter Brueghel the Elder)

The term genre is much used in the history and criticism of visual art, but in art history has meanings that overlap rather confusingly. Genre painting is a term for paintings where the main subject features human figures to whom no specific identity attaches – in other words, figures are not portraits, characters from a story, or allegorical personifications. These are distinguished from staffage: incidental figures in what is primarily a landscape or architectural painting. Genre painting may also be used as a wider term covering genre painting proper, and other specialized types of paintings such as still-life, landscapes, marine paintings and animal paintings.

The concept of the "hierarchy of genres" was a powerful one in artistic theory, especially between the 17th and 19th centuries. It was strongest in France, where it was associated with the Académie française which held a central role in academic art. The genres in hierarchical order are:

Literature

A literary genre is a category of literary composition. Genres may be determined by literary technique, tone, content, or even (as in the case of fiction) length. Genre should not be confused with age category, by which literature may be classified as either adult, young adult, or children's. They also must not be confused with format, such as graphic novel or picture book. The distinctions between genres and categories are flexible and loosely defined, often with subgroups.

The most general genres in literature are (in loose chronological order) epic, tragedy,[7] comedy, novel, and short story. They can all be in the genres prose or poetry, which shows best how loosely genres are defined. Additionally, a genre such as satire might appear in any of the above, not only as a subgenre but as a mixture of genres. Finally, they are defined by the general cultural movement of the historical period in which they were composed. In popular fiction, which is especially divided by genres, genre fiction is the more usual term.

In literature, genre has been known as an intangible taxonomy. This taxonomy implies a concept of containment or that an idea will be stable forever. The earliest recorded systems of genre in Western history can be traced back to Plato and Aristotle. Gérard Genette, a French literary theorist and author of The Architext, describes Plato as creating three Imitational genres: dramatic dialogue, pure narrative, and epic (a mixture of dialogue and narrative). Lyric poetry, the fourth and final type of Greek literature, was excluded by Plato as a non-mimetic mode. Aristotle later revised Plato's system by eliminating the pure narrative as a viable mode and distinguishing by two additional criteria: the object to be imitated, as objects could be either superior or inferior, and the medium of presentation such as words, gestures or verse. Essentially, the three categories of mode, object, and medium dialogue, epic (superior-mixed narrative), comedy (inferior-dramatic dialogue), and parody (inferior-mixed narrative). Genette continues by explaining the later integration of lyric poetry into the classical system during the romantic period, replacing the now removed pure narrative mode. Lyric poetry, once considered non-mimetic, was deemed to imitate feelings, becoming the third leg of a new tripartite system: lyrical, epical, and dramatic dialogue. This system, which came to "dominate all the literary theory of German romanticism (and therefore well beyond)…" (38), has seen numerous attempts at expansion or revision. However, more ambitious efforts to expand the tripartite system resulted in new taxonomic systems of increasing scope and complexity.

Genette reflects upon these various systems, comparing them to the original tripartite arrangement: "its structure is somewhat superior to…those that have come after, fundamentally flawed as they are by their inclusive and hierarchical taxonomy, which each time immediately brings the whole game to a standstill and produces an impasse" (74). Taxonomy allows for a structured classification system of genre, as opposed to a more contemporary rhetorical model of genre.

Film

The basic genres of film can be regarded as drama, in the feature film and most cartoons, and documentary. Most dramatic feature films, especially from Hollywood fall fairly comfortably into one of a long list of film genres such as the Western, war film, horror film, romantic comedy film, musical, crime film, and many others. Many of these genres have a number of subgenres, for example by setting or subject, or a distinctive national style, for example in the Indian Bollywood musical.

Music

A music genre is a conventional category that identifies pieces of music as belonging to a shared tradition or set of conventions.[8] It is to be distinguished from musical form and musical style, although in practice these terms are sometimes used interchangeably.[citation needed] There are numerous genres in Western classical music and popular music, as well as musical theatre and the music of non-Western cultures. The term is now perhaps over-used to describe relatively small differences in musical style in modern rock music, that also may reflect sociological differences in their audiences.[citation needed] Timothy Laurie suggests that in the context of rock and pop music studies, the "appeal of genre criticism is that it makes narratives out of musical worlds that often seem to lack them".[9]

Music can be divided into different genres in several ways. The artistic nature of music means that these classifications are often arbitrary and controversial, and some genres may overlap. There are several academic approaches to genres. In his book Form in Tonal Music, Douglass M. Green lists madrigal, motet, canzona, ricercar, and dance as examples of genres from the Renaissance period. According to Green, "Beethoven's Op. 61 and Mendelssohn's Op. 64 are identical in genre – both are violin concertos – but different in form. However, Mozart's Rondo for Piano, K. 511, and the Agnus Dei from his Mass, K. 317 are quite different in genre but happen to be similar in form."[10] Some, like Peter van der Merwe, treat the terms genre and style as the same, saying that genre should be defined as pieces of music that share a certain style or "basic musical language".[11]

Others, such as Allan F. Moore, state that genre and style are two separate terms, and that secondary characteristics such as subject matter can also differentiate between genres.[12] A music genre or subgenre may be defined by the musical techniques, the styles, the context, and content and spirit of the themes. Geographical origin is sometimes used to identify a music genre, though a single geographical category will often include a wide variety of subgenres.

Several music scholars have criticized the priority accorded to genre-based communities and listening practices. For example, Laurie argues that "music genres do not belong to isolated, self-sufficient communities. People constantly move between environments where diverse forms of music are heard, advertised and accessorised with distinctive iconographies, narratives and celebrity identities that also touch on non-musical worlds."[9]

Popular culture and other media

The concept of genre is often applied, sometimes rather loosely, to other media with an artistic element, such as video game genres. Genre, and numerous minutely divided subgenres, affect popular culture very significantly, not least as they are used to classify it for publicity purposes. The vastly increased output of popular culture in the age of electronic media encourages dividing cultural products by genre to simplify the search for products by consumers, a trend the Internet has only intensified.

Linguistics

In philosophy of language, genre figures prominently in the works of philosopher and literary scholar Mikhail Bakhtin. Bakhtin's basic observations were of "speech genres" (the idea of heteroglossia), modes of speaking or writing that people learn to mimic, weave together, and manipulate (such as "formal letter" and "grocery list", or "university lecture" and "personal anecdote"). In this sense, genres are socially specified: recognized and defined (often informally) by a particular culture or community. The work of Georg Lukács also touches on the nature of literary genres, appearing separately but around the same time (1920s–1930s) as Bakhtin. Norman Fairclough has a similar concept of genre that emphasizes the social context of the text: Genres are "different ways of (inter)acting discoursally" (Fairclough, 2003: 26).

A text's genre may be determined by its:

  1. Linguistic function.
  2. Formal traits.
  3. Textual organization.
  4. Relation of communicative situation to formal and organizational traits of the text (Charaudeau and Maingueneau, 2002:278–280).

Rhetoric

In the field of rhetoric, genre theorists usually understand genres as types of actions rather than types or forms of texts.[13] On this perspective, texts are channels through which genres are enacted. Carolyn Miller's[14] work has been especially important for this perspective. Drawing on Lloyd Bitzer's concept of rhetorical situation,[15] Miller reasons that recurring rhetorical problems tend to elicit recurring responses; drawing on Alfred Schütz,[16] she reasons that these recurring responses become "typified" – that is, socially constructed as recognizable types. Miller argues that these "typified rhetorical actions" (p. 151) are properly understood as genres.

Building off of Miller, Charles Bazerman and Clay Spinuzzi have argued that genres understood as actions derive their meaning from other genres – that is, other actions. Bazerman therefore proposes that we analyze genres in terms of "genre systems",[17] while Spinuzzi prefers the closely related concept of "genre ecologies".[18] Reiff and Bawarshi define genre analysis as a critical reading of people's patterns of communication in different situations.[13]

This tradition has had implications for the teaching of writing in American colleges and universities. Combining rhetorical genre theory with activity theory, David Russell has proposed that standard English composition courses are ill-suited to teach the genres that students will write in other contexts across the university and beyond.[19] Elizabeth Wardle contends that standard composition courses do teach genres, but that these are inauthentic "mutt genres" that are often of little use outside of composition courses.[20]

Genre is effective as a tool in rhetoric because it allows a speaker to set the context for a rhetorical discussion. Devitt, Reiff, and Bawarshi suggest that rhetorical genres may be assigned based on careful analysis of the subject matter and consideration of the audience.[21]

Genre is related to Ludwig Wittgenstein's theory of Family resemblance in which he describes how genres act like a family tree, where members of a family are related, but not exact copies of one another. [22]

History

This concept of genre originated from the classification systems created by Plato. Plato divided literature into the three classic genres accepted in Ancient Greece: poetry, drama, and prose. Poetry is further subdivided into epic, lyric, and drama. The divisions are recognized as being set by Aristotle and Plato; however, they were not the only ones. Many genre theorists added to these accepted forms of poetry.

Classical and Romance genre theory

The earliest recorded systems of genre in Western history can be traced back to Plato and Aristotle. Gérard Genette explains his interpretation of the history of genre in "The Architext". He described Plato as the creator of three imitational, mimetic genres distinguished by mode of imitation rather than content. These three imitational genres include dramatic dialogue, the drama; pure narrative, the dithyramb; and a mixture of the two, the epic. Plato excluded lyric poetry as a non-mimetic, imitational mode. Genette further discussed how Aristotle revised Plato's system by first eliminating the pure narrative as a viable mode. He then uses two additional criteria to distinguish the system. The first of the criteria is the object to be imitated, whether superior or inferior. The second criterion is the medium of presentation: words, gestures, or verse. Essentially, the three categories of mode, object, and medium can be visualized along an XYZ axis. Excluding the criteria of medium, Aristotle's system distinguished four types of classical genres: tragedy, epic, comedy, and parody.

Genette explained the integration of lyric poetry into the classical system by replacing the removed pure narrative mode. Lyric poetry, once considered non-mimetic, was deemed to imitate feelings, becoming the third "Architext", a term coined by Gennette, of a new long-enduring tripartite system: lyrical; epical, the mixed narrative; and dramatic, the dialogue. This new system that came to "dominate all the literary theory of German romanticism" (Genette 38) has seen numerous attempts at expansion and revision. Such attempts include Friedrich Schlegel's triad of subjective form, the lyric; objective form, the dramatic; and subjective-objective form, the epic. However, more ambitious efforts to expand the tripartite system resulted in new taxonomic systems of increasing complexity. Gennette reflected upon these various systems, comparing them to the original tripartite arrangement: "its structure is somewhat superior to most of those that have come after, fundamentally flawed as they are by their inclusive and hierarchical taxonomy, which each time immediately brings the whole game to a standstill and produces an impasse".

Audiences

Although genres are not always precisely definable, genre considerations are one of the most important factors in determining what a person will see or read. The classification properties of genre can attract or repel potential users depending on the individual's understanding of a genre.

Genre creates an expectation in that expectation is met or not. Many genres have built-in audiences and corresponding publications that support them, such as magazines and websites. Inversely, audiences may call out for change in an antecedent genre and create an entirely new genre.

The term may be used in categorizing web pages, like "news page" and "fan page", with both very different layout, audience, and intention (Rosso, 2008). Some search engines like Vivísimo try to group found web pages into automated categories in an attempt to show various genres the search hits might fit.

Subgenre

A subgenre is a subordinate within a genre,[23][24] Two stories being the same genre can still sometimes differ in subgenre. For example, if a fantasy story has darker and more frightening elements of fantasy, it would belong in the subgenre of dark fantasy; whereas another fantasy story that features magic swords and wizards would belong to the subgenre of sword and sorcery.

Microgenre

A microgenre is a highly specialized, narrow classification of a cultural practice. The term has come into usage in the 21st century, and most commonly refers to music.[25] It is also associated with the hyper-specific categories used in recommendations for television shows and movies on digital streaming platforms such as Netflix, and is sometimes used more broadly by scholars analyzing niche forms in other periods and other media.[26]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Definition of GENRE". www.merriam-webster.com. Retrieved 2022-09-22.
  2. ^ Devitt, Amy J. (2015), Heilker, Paul; Vandenberg, Peter (eds.), "Genre", Keywords in Writing Studies, Utah State University Press, pp. 82–87, doi:10.7330/9780874219746.c017, ISBN 978-0-87421-974-6, retrieved 2021-02-04
  3. ^ Miller, Carolyn R. (1984). ""Genre as Social Action"". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 70 (2): 151–167. doi:10.1080/00335638409383686.
  4. ^ Aristotle (2000), Butcher, S. H. (ed.), Poetics, Internet Classics Archive, retrieved 2021-04-27
  5. ^ Todorov, Tzvetan (1976), ""The Origins of Genre"", New Literary History, 8 (1): 159–170, doi:10.2307/468619, JSTOR 468619
  6. ^ Ezra LaFleur (28 May 2020). "What is Classical Music? A Family Resemblance".
  7. ^ Bakhtin 1983, p. 3.
  8. ^ "Genre". Grove Music Online. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  9. ^ a b Laurie, Timothy (2014). "Music Genre as Method". Cultural Studies Review. 20 (2). doi:10.5130/csr.v20i2.4149.
  10. ^ Green, Douglass M. (1965). Form in Tonal Music. Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc. p. 1. ISBN 0-03-020286-8.
  11. ^ van der Merwe, Peter (1989). Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-Century Popular Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 3. ISBN 0-19-316121-4.
  12. ^ Moore, Allan F. "Categorical Conventions in Music Discourse: Style and Genre". Music & Letters, Vol. 82, No. 3 (Aug. 2001), pp. 432–442.
  13. ^ a b "Genre: An Introduction to History, Theory, Research, and Pedagogy - The WAC Clearinghouse". wac.colostate.edu. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  14. ^ Miller, C. R. (1984). Genre as social action. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 70(2), 151–167.
  15. ^ Bitzer, L. F. (1968). The Rhetorical Situation. Philosophy and Rhetoric, 1(1), 1–14.
  16. ^ Schutz, A., & Luckmann, T. (1973). The Structures of the Life-World. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press.
  17. ^ Bazerman, C. (1994). Systems of Genre and the Enactment of Social Intentions. In Genre and the New Rhetoric (pp. 79–101). London/Bristol: Taylor & Francis.
  18. ^ Spinuzzi, C., & Zachry, M. (2000). Genre Ecologies : An Open-System Approach to Understanding and Constructing Documentation. ACM Journal of Computer Documentation, 24(3), 169–181.
  19. ^ Russell, D. R. (1995). Activity theory and its implications for writing instruction. In J. Petraglia (Ed.), Reconceiving writing, rethinking writing instruction (pp. 51–78). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
  20. ^ Wardle, E. (2009). "Mutt Genres" and the Goal of FYC: Can we Help Students Write the Genres of the University? College Composition and Communication, 60(4), 765–789.
  21. ^ Cope, Emily; Ringer, Jeffery M. (2015). Rhetorical Choices: Analyzing and Writing Arguments. Pearson. pp. 87–98. ISBN 9781269885805.
  22. ^ Wittgenstein, Ludwig (2001). Philosophical Investigations: The German Text, with a Revised English Translation. Blackwell. p. 23. ISBN 9780631231592.
  23. ^ "subgenre". dictionary.com.
  24. ^ "Subgenre". The Free Dictionary. Farlex.
  25. ^ "A Recent History of Microgenres". The FADER. Retrieved 2020-02-21.
  26. ^ The microgenre: a quick look at small culture. O'Donnell, Molly C.,, Stevens, Anne H., 1971-. New York. 2020. ISBN 978-1-5013-4584-5. OCLC 1139150914.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)

Sources

  • Aristotle (2000). Poetics. Translated by Butcher, S. H. Cambridge, MA: The Internet Classics Archive.
  • Bakhtin, Mikhail M. (1983). "Epic and Novel". In Holquist, Michael (ed.). The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-71527-7.
  • Charaudeau, P.; Maingueneau, D. and Adam, J. Dictionnaire d'analyse du discours. Seuil, 2002.
  • Devitt, Amy J. "A Theory of Genre". Writing Genres. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2004. 1–32.
  • Fairclough, Norman. Analysing Discourse: Textual Analysis for Social Research. Routledge, 2003.
  • Genette, Gérard. The Architext: An Introduction. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992. [1979]
  • Jamieson, Kathleen M. "Antecedent Genre as Rhetorical Constraint". Quarterly Journal of Speech 61 (1975): 406–415.
  • Killoran, John B. "The Gnome In The Front Yard and Other Public Figurations: Genres of Self-Presentation on Personal Home Pages". Biography 26.1 (2003): 66–83.
  • LaCapra, Dominick. "History and Genre: Comment". New Literary History 17.2 (1986): 219–221.
  • Miller, Carolyn. "Genre as Social Action". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 70 (1984): 151–67.
  • Rosso, Mark. "User-based Identification of Web Genres". Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 59 (2008): 1053–1072.
  • Todorov, Tzvetan. "The Origins of Genre". New Literary History 8.1 (1976): 159-170.

Further reading

  • Pare, Anthony. "Genre and Identity". The Rhetoric and Ideology of Genre: Strategies for Stability and Change. Eds. Richard M. Coe, Lorelei Lingard, and Tatiana Teslenko. Creskill, N.J.: Hampton Press, 2002.ISBN 978-1572733848.
  • Sullivan, Ceri (2007) "Disposable elements? Indications of genre in early modern titles", Modern Language Review 102.3, pp. 641–653.

External links

genre, this, article, about, concept, genres, list, genres, list, genres, genre, studies, genre, theory, studies, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help. This article is about the concept of genres For a list of genres see List of genres For genre studies or genre theory see Genre studies For other uses see Genre disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Genre from French genre kind or sort 1 is any form or type of communication in any mode written spoken digital artistic etc with socially agreed upon conventions developed over time 2 In popular usage it normally describes a category of literature music or other forms of art or entertainment whether written or spoken audio or visual based on some set of stylistic criteria yet genres can be aesthetic rhetorical communicative or functional Genres form by conventions that change over time as cultures invent new genres and discontinue the use of old ones 3 Often works fit into multiple genres by way of borrowing and recombining these conventions Stand alone texts works or pieces of communication may have individual styles but genres are amalgams of these texts based on agreed upon or socially inferred conventions Some genres may have rigid strictly adhered to guidelines while others may show great flexibility Genre began clarification needed as an absolute classification system for ancient Greek literature as set out in Aristotle s Poetics 4 For Aristotle poetry odes epics etc prose and performance each had specific design features that supported appropriate content of each genre Speech patterns for comedy would not be appropriate for tragedy for example and even actors were restricted to their genre under the assumption that a type of person could tell one type of story best Genres proliferate and develop beyond Aristotle s classifications in response to changes in audiences and creators 5 Genre has become a dynamic tool to help the public make sense out of unpredictability through artistic expression Given that art is often a response to a social state in that people write paint sing dance and otherwise produce art about what they know about the use of genre as a tool must be able to adapt to changing meanings Musician Ezra LaFleur argues that discussion of genre should draw from Ludwig Wittgenstein s idea of family resemblance 6 Genres are helpful labels for communicating but do not necessarily have a single attribute that is the essence of the genre Contents 1 Visual arts 2 Literature 3 Film 4 Music 5 Popular culture and other media 6 Linguistics 7 Rhetoric 8 History 8 1 Classical and Romance genre theory 9 Audiences 10 Subgenre 11 Microgenre 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksVisual arts Edit A genre painting Peasant Dance c 1568 by Pieter Brueghel the Elder The term genre is much used in the history and criticism of visual art but in art history has meanings that overlap rather confusingly Genre painting is a term for paintings where the main subject features human figures to whom no specific identity attaches in other words figures are not portraits characters from a story or allegorical personifications These are distinguished from staffage incidental figures in what is primarily a landscape or architectural painting Genre painting may also be used as a wider term covering genre painting proper and other specialized types of paintings such as still life landscapes marine paintings and animal paintings The concept of the hierarchy of genres was a powerful one in artistic theory especially between the 17th and 19th centuries It was strongest in France where it was associated with the Academie francaise which held a central role in academic art The genres in hierarchical order are History painting including narrative religious mythological and allegorical subjects Portrait painting Genre painting or scenes of everyday life Landscape landscapists were the common footmen in the Army of Art according to the Dutch theorist Samuel van Hoogstraten and cityscape Animal painting Still lifeLiterature EditMain articles Literary genre and List of literary genres A literary genre is a category of literary composition Genres may be determined by literary technique tone content or even as in the case of fiction length Genre should not be confused with age category by which literature may be classified as either adult young adult or children s They also must not be confused with format such as graphic novel or picture book The distinctions between genres and categories are flexible and loosely defined often with subgroups The most general genres in literature are in loose chronological order epic tragedy 7 comedy novel and short story They can all be in the genres prose or poetry which shows best how loosely genres are defined Additionally a genre such as satire might appear in any of the above not only as a subgenre but as a mixture of genres Finally they are defined by the general cultural movement of the historical period in which they were composed In popular fiction which is especially divided by genres genre fiction is the more usual term In literature genre has been known as an intangible taxonomy This taxonomy implies a concept of containment or that an idea will be stable forever The earliest recorded systems of genre in Western history can be traced back to Plato and Aristotle Gerard Genette a French literary theorist and author of The Architext describes Plato as creating three Imitational genres dramatic dialogue pure narrative and epic a mixture of dialogue and narrative Lyric poetry the fourth and final type of Greek literature was excluded by Plato as a non mimetic mode Aristotle later revised Plato s system by eliminating the pure narrative as a viable mode and distinguishing by two additional criteria the object to be imitated as objects could be either superior or inferior and the medium of presentation such as words gestures or verse Essentially the three categories of mode object and medium dialogue epic superior mixed narrative comedy inferior dramatic dialogue and parody inferior mixed narrative Genette continues by explaining the later integration of lyric poetry into the classical system during the romantic period replacing the now removed pure narrative mode Lyric poetry once considered non mimetic was deemed to imitate feelings becoming the third leg of a new tripartite system lyrical epical and dramatic dialogue This system which came to dominate all the literary theory of German romanticism and therefore well beyond 38 has seen numerous attempts at expansion or revision However more ambitious efforts to expand the tripartite system resulted in new taxonomic systems of increasing scope and complexity Genette reflects upon these various systems comparing them to the original tripartite arrangement its structure is somewhat superior to those that have come after fundamentally flawed as they are by their inclusive and hierarchical taxonomy which each time immediately brings the whole game to a standstill and produces an impasse 74 Taxonomy allows for a structured classification system of genre as opposed to a more contemporary rhetorical model of genre Film EditMain article Film genre The basic genres of film can be regarded as drama in the feature film and most cartoons and documentary Most dramatic feature films especially from Hollywood fall fairly comfortably into one of a long list of film genres such as the Western war film horror film romantic comedy film musical crime film and many others Many of these genres have a number of subgenres for example by setting or subject or a distinctive national style for example in the Indian Bollywood musical Music EditMain article Music genre A music genre is a conventional category that identifies pieces of music as belonging to a shared tradition or set of conventions 8 It is to be distinguished from musical form and musical style although in practice these terms are sometimes used interchangeably citation needed There are numerous genres in Western classical music and popular music as well as musical theatre and the music of non Western cultures The term is now perhaps over used to describe relatively small differences in musical style in modern rock music that also may reflect sociological differences in their audiences citation needed Timothy Laurie suggests that in the context of rock and pop music studies the appeal of genre criticism is that it makes narratives out of musical worlds that often seem to lack them 9 Music can be divided into different genres in several ways The artistic nature of music means that these classifications are often arbitrary and controversial and some genres may overlap There are several academic approaches to genres In his book Form in Tonal Music Douglass M Green lists madrigal motet canzona ricercar and dance as examples of genres from the Renaissance period According to Green Beethoven s Op 61 and Mendelssohn s Op 64 are identical in genre both are violin concertos but different in form However Mozart s Rondo for Piano K 511 and the Agnus Dei from his Mass K 317 are quite different in genre but happen to be similar in form 10 Some like Peter van der Merwe treat the terms genre and style as the same saying that genre should be defined as pieces of music that share a certain style or basic musical language 11 Others such as Allan F Moore state that genre and style are two separate terms and that secondary characteristics such as subject matter can also differentiate between genres 12 A music genre or subgenre may be defined by the musical techniques the styles the context and content and spirit of the themes Geographical origin is sometimes used to identify a music genre though a single geographical category will often include a wide variety of subgenres Several music scholars have criticized the priority accorded to genre based communities and listening practices For example Laurie argues that music genres do not belong to isolated self sufficient communities People constantly move between environments where diverse forms of music are heard advertised and accessorised with distinctive iconographies narratives and celebrity identities that also touch on non musical worlds 9 Popular culture and other media EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The concept of genre is often applied sometimes rather loosely to other media with an artistic element such as video game genres Genre and numerous minutely divided subgenres affect popular culture very significantly not least as they are used to classify it for publicity purposes The vastly increased output of popular culture in the age of electronic media encourages dividing cultural products by genre to simplify the search for products by consumers a trend the Internet has only intensified Linguistics EditIn philosophy of language genre figures prominently in the works of philosopher and literary scholar Mikhail Bakhtin Bakhtin s basic observations were of speech genres the idea of heteroglossia modes of speaking or writing that people learn to mimic weave together and manipulate such as formal letter and grocery list or university lecture and personal anecdote In this sense genres are socially specified recognized and defined often informally by a particular culture or community The work of Georg Lukacs also touches on the nature of literary genres appearing separately but around the same time 1920s 1930s as Bakhtin Norman Fairclough has a similar concept of genre that emphasizes the social context of the text Genres are different ways of inter acting discoursally Fairclough 2003 26 A text s genre may be determined by its Linguistic function Formal traits Textual organization Relation of communicative situation to formal and organizational traits of the text Charaudeau and Maingueneau 2002 278 280 Rhetoric EditIn the field of rhetoric genre theorists usually understand genres as types of actions rather than types or forms of texts 13 On this perspective texts are channels through which genres are enacted Carolyn Miller s 14 work has been especially important for this perspective Drawing on Lloyd Bitzer s concept of rhetorical situation 15 Miller reasons that recurring rhetorical problems tend to elicit recurring responses drawing on Alfred Schutz 16 she reasons that these recurring responses become typified that is socially constructed as recognizable types Miller argues that these typified rhetorical actions p 151 are properly understood as genres Building off of Miller Charles Bazerman and Clay Spinuzzi have argued that genres understood as actions derive their meaning from other genres that is other actions Bazerman therefore proposes that we analyze genres in terms of genre systems 17 while Spinuzzi prefers the closely related concept of genre ecologies 18 Reiff and Bawarshi define genre analysis as a critical reading of people s patterns of communication in different situations 13 This tradition has had implications for the teaching of writing in American colleges and universities Combining rhetorical genre theory with activity theory David Russell has proposed that standard English composition courses are ill suited to teach the genres that students will write in other contexts across the university and beyond 19 Elizabeth Wardle contends that standard composition courses do teach genres but that these are inauthentic mutt genres that are often of little use outside of composition courses 20 Genre is effective as a tool in rhetoric because it allows a speaker to set the context for a rhetorical discussion Devitt Reiff and Bawarshi suggest that rhetorical genres may be assigned based on careful analysis of the subject matter and consideration of the audience 21 Genre is related to Ludwig Wittgenstein s theory of Family resemblance in which he describes how genres act like a family tree where members of a family are related but not exact copies of one another 22 History EditThis concept of genre originated from the classification systems created by Plato Plato divided literature into the three classic genres accepted in Ancient Greece poetry drama and prose Poetry is further subdivided into epic lyric and drama The divisions are recognized as being set by Aristotle and Plato however they were not the only ones Many genre theorists added to these accepted forms of poetry Classical and Romance genre theory Edit The earliest recorded systems of genre in Western history can be traced back to Plato and Aristotle Gerard Genette explains his interpretation of the history of genre in The Architext He described Plato as the creator of three imitational mimetic genres distinguished by mode of imitation rather than content These three imitational genres include dramatic dialogue the drama pure narrative the dithyramb and a mixture of the two the epic Plato excluded lyric poetry as a non mimetic imitational mode Genette further discussed how Aristotle revised Plato s system by first eliminating the pure narrative as a viable mode He then uses two additional criteria to distinguish the system The first of the criteria is the object to be imitated whether superior or inferior The second criterion is the medium of presentation words gestures or verse Essentially the three categories of mode object and medium can be visualized along an XYZ axis Excluding the criteria of medium Aristotle s system distinguished four types of classical genres tragedy epic comedy and parody Genette explained the integration of lyric poetry into the classical system by replacing the removed pure narrative mode Lyric poetry once considered non mimetic was deemed to imitate feelings becoming the third Architext a term coined by Gennette of a new long enduring tripartite system lyrical epical the mixed narrative and dramatic the dialogue This new system that came to dominate all the literary theory of German romanticism Genette 38 has seen numerous attempts at expansion and revision Such attempts include Friedrich Schlegel s triad of subjective form the lyric objective form the dramatic and subjective objective form the epic However more ambitious efforts to expand the tripartite system resulted in new taxonomic systems of increasing complexity Gennette reflected upon these various systems comparing them to the original tripartite arrangement its structure is somewhat superior to most of those that have come after fundamentally flawed as they are by their inclusive and hierarchical taxonomy which each time immediately brings the whole game to a standstill and produces an impasse Audiences EditAlthough genres are not always precisely definable genre considerations are one of the most important factors in determining what a person will see or read The classification properties of genre can attract or repel potential users depending on the individual s understanding of a genre Genre creates an expectation in that expectation is met or not Many genres have built in audiences and corresponding publications that support them such as magazines and websites Inversely audiences may call out for change in an antecedent genre and create an entirely new genre The term may be used in categorizing web pages like news page and fan page with both very different layout audience and intention Rosso 2008 Some search engines like Vivisimo try to group found web pages into automated categories in an attempt to show various genres the search hits might fit Subgenre EditA subgenre is a subordinate within a genre 23 24 Two stories being the same genre can still sometimes differ in subgenre For example if a fantasy story has darker and more frightening elements of fantasy it would belong in the subgenre of dark fantasy whereas another fantasy story that features magic swords and wizards would belong to the subgenre of sword and sorcery Microgenre EditMain article Microgenre A microgenre is a highly specialized narrow classification of a cultural practice The term has come into usage in the 21st century and most commonly refers to music 25 It is also associated with the hyper specific categories used in recommendations for television shows and movies on digital streaming platforms such as Netflix and is sometimes used more broadly by scholars analyzing niche forms in other periods and other media 26 See also EditList of genresReferences EditCitations Edit Definition of GENRE www merriam webster com Retrieved 2022 09 22 Devitt Amy J 2015 Heilker Paul Vandenberg Peter eds Genre Keywords in Writing Studies Utah State University Press pp 82 87 doi 10 7330 9780874219746 c017 ISBN 978 0 87421 974 6 retrieved 2021 02 04 Miller Carolyn R 1984 Genre as Social Action Quarterly Journal of Speech 70 2 151 167 doi 10 1080 00335638409383686 Aristotle 2000 Butcher S H ed Poetics Internet Classics Archive retrieved 2021 04 27 Todorov Tzvetan 1976 The Origins of Genre New Literary History 8 1 159 170 doi 10 2307 468619 JSTOR 468619 Ezra LaFleur 28 May 2020 What is Classical Music A Family Resemblance Bakhtin 1983 p 3 Genre Grove Music Online Retrieved 2023 01 25 a b Laurie Timothy 2014 Music Genre as Method Cultural Studies Review 20 2 doi 10 5130 csr v20i2 4149 Green Douglass M 1965 Form in Tonal Music Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc p 1 ISBN 0 03 020286 8 van der Merwe Peter 1989 Origins of the Popular Style The Antecedents of Twentieth Century Popular Music Oxford Clarendon Press p 3 ISBN 0 19 316121 4 Moore Allan F Categorical Conventions in Music Discourse Style and Genre Music amp Letters Vol 82 No 3 Aug 2001 pp 432 442 a b Genre An Introduction to History Theory Research and Pedagogy The WAC Clearinghouse wac colostate edu Retrieved 2023 01 25 Miller C R 1984 Genre as social action Quarterly Journal of Speech 70 2 151 167 Bitzer L F 1968 The Rhetorical Situation Philosophy and Rhetoric 1 1 1 14 Schutz A amp Luckmann T 1973 The Structures of the Life World Evanston IL Northwestern University Press Bazerman C 1994 Systems of Genre and the Enactment of Social Intentions In Genre and the New Rhetoric pp 79 101 London Bristol Taylor amp Francis Spinuzzi C amp Zachry M 2000 Genre Ecologies An Open System Approach to Understanding and Constructing Documentation ACM Journal of Computer Documentation 24 3 169 181 Russell D R 1995 Activity theory and its implications for writing instruction In J Petraglia Ed Reconceiving writing rethinking writing instruction pp 51 78 Hillsdale NJ Erlbaum Wardle E 2009 Mutt Genres and the Goal of FYC Can we Help Students Write the Genres of the University College Composition and Communication 60 4 765 789 Cope Emily Ringer Jeffery M 2015 Rhetorical Choices Analyzing and Writing Arguments Pearson pp 87 98 ISBN 9781269885805 Wittgenstein Ludwig 2001 Philosophical Investigations The German Text with a Revised English Translation Blackwell p 23 ISBN 9780631231592 subgenre dictionary com Subgenre The Free Dictionary Farlex A Recent History of Microgenres The FADER Retrieved 2020 02 21 The microgenre a quick look at small culture O Donnell Molly C Stevens Anne H 1971 New York 2020 ISBN 978 1 5013 4584 5 OCLC 1139150914 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Sources Edit Aristotle 2000 Poetics Translated by Butcher S H Cambridge MA The Internet Classics Archive Bakhtin Mikhail M 1983 Epic and Novel In Holquist Michael ed The Dialogic Imagination Four Essays Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 71527 7 Charaudeau P Maingueneau D and Adam J Dictionnaire d analyse du discours Seuil 2002 Devitt Amy J A Theory of Genre Writing Genres Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press 2004 1 32 Fairclough Norman Analysing Discourse Textual Analysis for Social Research Routledge 2003 Genette Gerard The Architext An Introduction Berkeley University of California Press 1992 1979 Jamieson Kathleen M Antecedent Genre as Rhetorical Constraint Quarterly Journal of Speech 61 1975 406 415 Killoran John B The Gnome In The Front Yard and Other Public Figurations Genres of Self Presentation on Personal Home Pages Biography 26 1 2003 66 83 LaCapra Dominick History and Genre Comment New Literary History 17 2 1986 219 221 Miller Carolyn Genre as Social Action Quarterly Journal of Speech 70 1984 151 67 Rosso Mark User based Identification of Web Genres Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 59 2008 1053 1072 Todorov Tzvetan The Origins of Genre New Literary History 8 1 1976 159 170 Further reading EditPare Anthony Genre and Identity The Rhetoric and Ideology of Genre Strategies for Stability and Change Eds Richard M Coe Lorelei Lingard and Tatiana Teslenko Creskill N J Hampton Press 2002 ISBN 978 1572733848 Sullivan Ceri 2007 Disposable elements Indications of genre in early modern titles Modern Language Review 102 3 pp 641 653 External links Edit Look up genre in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikidata has the property genre P136 see uses Genres of film at the Internet Movie Database Helping Children Understand Literary Genres Rhetorica Genre Archived 2021 02 24 at the Wayback Machine Museum of Broadcast Communications Archived 2013 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Dictionary com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Genre amp oldid 1156155437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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