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Wikipedia

Literature

Literature is any collection of written work, but it is also used more narrowly for writings specifically considered to be an art form, especially prose fiction, drama, and poetry.[1] In recent centuries, the definition has expanded to include oral literature, much of which has been transcribed.[2] Literature is a method of recording, preserving, and transmitting knowledge and entertainment, and can also have a social, psychological, spiritual, or political role.

Literature, as an art form, can also include works in various non-fiction genres, such as biography, diaries, memoir, letters, and essays. Within its broad definition, literature includes non-fictional books, articles or other printed information on a particular subject.[3][4]

Etymologically, the term derives from Latin literatura/litteratura "learning, a writing, grammar," originally "writing formed with letters," from litera/littera "letter".[5] In spite of this, the term has also been applied to spoken or sung texts.[6][7] Literature is often referred to synecdochically as "writing," and poetically as "the craft of writing" or simply "the craft." Syd Field described his discipline, screenwriting, as "a craft that occasionally rises to the level of art."[8]

Developments in print technology have allowed an ever-growing distribution and proliferation of written works, which now includes electronic literature.

Definitions

Definitions of literature have varied over time.[9] In Western Europe, prior to the 18th century, literature denoted all books and writing. Literature can be seen as returning to older, more inclusive notions, so that cultural studies, for instance, include, in addition to canonical works, popular and minority genres. The word is also used in reference to non-written works: to "oral literature" and "the literature of preliterate culture".

A value judgment definition of literature considers it as consisting solely of high quality writing that forms part of the belles-lettres ("fine writing") tradition.[10] An example of this is in the (1910–11) Encyclopædia Britannica that classified literature as "the best expression of the best thought reduced to writing".[11]

History

Oral literature

 
A traditional Kyrgyz manaschi performing part of the Epic of Manas at a yurt camp in Karakol, Kyrgyzstan

The use of the term "literature" here is a little problematic because of its origins in the Latin littera, “letter,” essentially writing. Alternatives such as "oral forms" and "oral genres" have been suggested but the word literature is widely used.[12]

Australian Aboriginal culture has thrived on oral traditions and oral histories passed down through tens of thousands of years. In a study published in February 2020, new evidence showed that both Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes erupted between 34,000 and 40,000 years ago.[13] Significantly, this is a "minimum age constraint for human presence in Victoria", and also could be interpreted as evidence for the oral histories of the Gunditjmara people, an Aboriginal Australian people of south-western Victoria, which tell of volcanic eruptions being some of the oldest oral traditions in existence.[14] An axe found underneath volcanic ash in 1947 had already proven that humans inhabited the region before the eruption of Tower Hill.[13]

Oral literature is an ancient human tradition found in "all corners of the world".[15] Modern archaeology has been unveiling evidence of the human efforts to preserve and transmit arts and knowledge that depended completely or partially on an oral tradition, across various cultures:

The Judeo-Christian Bible reveals its oral traditional roots; medieval European manuscripts are penned by performing scribes; geometric vases from archaic Greece mirror Homer's oral style. (...) Indeed, if these final decades of the millennium have taught us anything, it must be that oral tradition never was the other we accused it of being; it never was the primitive, preliminary technology of communication we thought it to be. Rather, if the whole truth is told, oral tradition stands out as the single most dominant communicative technology of our species as both a historical fact and, in many areas still, a contemporary reality.[15]

The earliest poetry is believed to have been recited or sung, employed as a way of remembering history, genealogy, and law.[16]

In Asia, the transmission of folklore, mythologies as well as scriptures in ancient India, in different Indian religions, was by oral tradition, preserved with precision with the help of elaborate mnemonic techniques.[17]

The early Buddhist texts are also generally believed to be of oral tradition, with the first by comparing inconsistencies in the transmitted versions of literature from various oral societies such as the Greek, Serbia and other cultures, then noting that the Vedic literature is too consistent and vast to have been composed and transmitted orally across generations, without being written down.[18] According to Goody, the Vedic texts likely involved both a written and oral tradition, calling it a "parallel products of a literate society".[19]

All ancient Greek literature was to some degree oral in nature, and the earliest literature was completely so.[20] Homer's epic poetry, states Michael Gagarin, was largely composed, performed and transmitted orally.[21] As folklores and legends were performed in front of distant audiences, the singers would substitute the names in the stories with local characters or rulers to give the stories a local flavor and thus connect with the audience, but making the historicity embedded in the oral tradition as unreliable.[22] The lack of surviving texts about the Greek and Roman religious traditions have led scholars to presume that these were ritualistic and transmitted as oral traditions, but some scholars disagree that the complex rituals in the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations were an exclusive product of an oral tradition.[23]

Writing systems are not known to have existed among Native North Americans before contact with Europeans. Oral storytelling traditions flourished in a context without the use of writing to record and preserve history, scientific knowledge, and social practices.[24] While some stories were told for amusement and leisure, most functioned as practical lessons from tribal experience applied to immediate moral, social, psychological, and environmental issues.[25] Stories fuse fictional, supernatural, or otherwise exaggerated characters and circumstances with real emotions and morals as a means of teaching. Plots often reflect real life situations and may be aimed at particular people known by the story's audience. In this way, social pressure could be exerted without directly causing embarrassment or social exclusion.[26] For example, rather than yelling, Inuit parents might deter their children from wandering too close to the water's edge by telling a story about a sea monster with a pouch for children within its reach.[27]

See also African literature#Oral literature

Oratory

Oratory or the art of public speaking "was for long considered a literary art".[3] From Ancient Greece to the late 19th century, rhetoric played a central role in Western education in training orators, lawyers, counselors, historians, statesmen, and poets.[28][note 1]

Writing

 
Limestone Kish tablet from Sumer with pictographic writing; may be the earliest known writing, 3500 BC. Ashmolean Museum

Around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration in Mesopotamia outgrew human memory, and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form.[30] Though in both ancient Egypt and Mesoamerica, writing may have already emerged because of the need to record historical and environmental events. Subsequent innovations included more uniform, predictable, legal systems, sacred texts, and the origins of modern practices of scientific inquiry and knowledge-consolidation, all largely reliant on portable and easily reproducible forms of writing.  

Early written literature

Ancient Egyptian literature,[31] along with Sumerian literature, are considered the world's oldest literatures.[32] The primary genres of the literature of ancient Egyptdidactic texts, hymns and prayers, and tales—were written almost entirely in verse;[33] By the Old Kingdom (26th century BC to 22nd century BC), literary works included funerary texts, epistles and letters, hymns and poems, and commemorative autobiographical texts recounting the careers of prominent administrative officials. It was not until the early Middle Kingdom (21st century BC to 17th century BC) that a narrative Egyptian literature was created.[34]

Many works of early periods, even in narrative form, had a covert moral or didactic purpose, such as the Sanskrit Panchatantra.200 BC – 300 AD, based on older oral tradition.[35][36] Drama and satire also developed as urban culture provided a larger public audience, and later readership, for literary production. Lyric poetry (as opposed to epic poetry) was often the speciality of courts and aristocratic circles, particularly in East Asia where songs were collected by the Chinese aristocracy as poems, the most notable being the Shijing or Book of Songs (1046–c.600 BC).[37][38][39]

In ancient China, early literature was primarily focused on philosophy, historiography, military science, agriculture, and poetry. China, the origin of modern paper making and woodblock printing, produced the world's first print cultures.[40] Much of Chinese literature originates with the Hundred Schools of Thought period that occurred during the Eastern Zhou Dynasty (769‒269 BC).[41] The most important of these include the Classics of Confucianism, of Daoism, of Mohism, of Legalism, as well as works of military science (e.g. Sun Tzu's The Art of War, c.5th century BC)) and Chinese history (e.g. Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, c.94 BC). Ancient Chinese literature had a heavy emphasis on historiography, with often very detailed court records. An exemplary piece of narrative history of ancient China was the Zuo Zhuan, which was compiled no later than 389 BC, and attributed to the blind 5th-century BC historian Zuo Qiuming.[42]

In ancient India, literature originated from stories that were originally orally transmitted. Early genres included drama, fables, sutras and epic poetry. Sanskrit literature begins with the Vedas, dating back to 1500–1000 BC, and continues with the Sanskrit Epics of Iron Age India.[43][44] The Vedas are among the oldest sacred texts. The Samhitas (vedic collections) date to roughly 1500–1000 BC, and the "circum-Vedic" texts, as well as the redaction of the Samhitas, date to c. 1000‒500 BC, resulting in a Vedic period, spanning the mid-2nd to mid 1st millennium BC, or the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age.[45] The period between approximately the 6th to 1st centuries BC saw the composition and redaction of the two most influential Indian epics, the Mahabharata[46][47] and the Ramayana,[48] with subsequent redaction progressing down to the 4th century AD. Other major literary works are Ramcharitmanas[49] & Krishnacharitmanas.

The earliest known Greek writings are Mycenaean (c.1600–1100 BC), written in the Linear B syllabary on clay tablets. These documents contain prosaic records largely concerned with trade (lists, inventories, receipts, etc.); no real literature has been discovered.[50][51] Michael Ventris and John Chadwick, the original decipherers of Linear B, state that literature almost certainly existed in Mycenaean Greece,[51] but it was either not written down or, if it was, it was on parchment or wooden tablets, which did not survive the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces in the twelfth century BC.[51]Homer's epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey, are central works of ancient Greek literature. It is generally accepted that the poems were composed at some point around the late eighth or early seventh century BC.[52] Modern scholars consider these accounts legendary.[53][54][55] Most researchers believe that the poems were originally transmitted orally.[56] From antiquity until the present day, the influence of Homeric epic on Western civilization has been great, inspiring many of its most famous works of literature, music, art and film.[57] The Homeric epics were the greatest influence on ancient Greek culture and education; to Plato, Homer was simply the one who "has taught Greece" – ten Hellada pepaideuken.[58][59] Hesiod's Works and Days (c.700 BC) and Theogony are some of the earliest, and most influential, of ancient Greek literature. Classical Greek genres included philosophy, poetry, historiography, comedies and dramas. Plato (428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC) and Aristotle (384–322 BC) authored philosophical texts that are the foundation of Western philosophy, Sappho (c. 630 – c. 570 BC) and Pindar were influential lyric poets, and Herodotus (c. 484 – c. 425 BC) and Thucydides were early Greek historians. Although drama was popular in ancient Greece, of the hundreds of tragedies written and performed during the classical age, only a limited number of plays by three authors still exist: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. The plays of Aristophanes (c. 446 – c. 386 BC) provide the only real examples of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy, the earliest form of Greek Comedy, and are in fact used to define the genre.[60]

The Hebrew religious text, the Torah, is widely seen as a product of the Persian period (539–333 BC, probably 450–350 BC).[61] This consensus echoes a traditional Jewish view which gives Ezra, the leader of the Jewish community on its return from Babylon, a pivotal role in its promulgation.[62] This represents a major source of Christianity's Bible, which has had a major influence on Western literature.[63]

The beginning of Roman literature dates to 240 BC, when a Roman audience saw a Latin version of a Greek play.[64] Literature in Latin would flourish for the next six centuries, and includes essays, histories, poems, plays, and other writings.

The Qur'an (610 AD to 632 AD),[65] the main holy book of Islam, had a significant influence on the Arab language, and marked the beginning of Islamic literature. Muslims believe it was transcribed in the Arabic dialect of the Quraysh, the tribe of Muhammad.[26][66] As Islam spread, the Quran had the effect of unifying and standardizing Arabic.[26]

Theological works in Latin were the dominant form of literature in Europe typically found in libraries during the Middle Ages. Western Vernacular literature includes the Poetic Edda and the sagas, or heroic epics, of Iceland, the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf, and the German Song of Hildebrandt. A later form of medieval fiction was the romance, an adventurous and sometimes magical narrative with strong popular appeal.[67]

Controversial, religious, political and instructional literature proliferated during the European Renaissance as a result of the Johannes Gutenberg's invention of the printing press[68] around 1440, while the Medieval romance developed into the novel,[69]

Publishing

 
The intricate frontispiece of the Diamond Sutra from Tang dynasty China, the world's earliest dated printed book, AD 868 (British Library)

Publishing became possible with the invention of writing but became more practical with the invention of printing. Prior to printing, distributed works were copied manually, by scribes.

The Chinese inventor Bi Sheng made movable type of earthenware c. 1045. Then c.1450, Johannes Gutenberg independently invented movable type in Europe. This invention gradually made books less expensive to produce and more widely available.

Early printed books, single sheets, and images created before 1501 in Europe are known as incunables or incunabula. "A man born in 1453, the year of the fall of Constantinople, could look back from his fiftieth year on a lifetime in which about eight million books had been printed, more perhaps than all the scribes of Europe had produced since Constantine founded his city in A.D. 330."[70]

Eventually, printing enabled other forms of publishing besides books. The history of modern newspaper publishing started in Germany in 1609, with publishing of magazines following in 1663.

University discipline

In England

In England in the late 1820s, growing political and social awareness, "particularly among the utilitarians and Benthamites, promoted the possibility of including courses in English literary study in the newly formed London University". This further developed into the idea of the study of literature being "the ideal carrier for the propagation of the humanist cultural myth of a well educated, culturally harmonious nation".[71]

America

Women and literature

The widespread education of women was not common until the nineteenth century, and because of this literature until recently was mostly male dominated.[72]

George Sand was an idea. She has a unique place in our age.
Others are great men ... she was a great woman.

Victor Hugo, Les funérailles de George Sand[73]

There were few English-language women poets whose names are remembered until the twentieth century. In the nineteenth century some names that stand out are Emily Brontë, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and Emily Dickinson (see American poetry). But while generally women are absent from the European cannon of Romantic literature, there is one notable exception, the French novelist and memoirist Amantine Dupin (1804 – 1876) best known by her pen name George Sand.[74][75] One of the more popular writers in Europe in her lifetime,[76] being more renowned than both Victor Hugo and Honoré de Balzac in England in the 1830s and 1840s,[77] Sand is recognised as one of the most notable writers of the European Romantic era. Jane Austen (1775 – 1817) is the first major English woman novelist, while Aphra Behn is an early female dramatist.

Nobel Prizes in Literature have been awarded between 1901 and 2020 to 117 individuals: 101 men and 16 women. Selma Lagerlöf (1858 – 1940) was the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, which she was awarded in 1909. Additionally, she was the first woman to be granted a membership in The Swedish Academy in 1914.[78]

Feminist scholars have since the twentieth century sought expand the literary canon to include more women writers.

Children's literature

 
The Adventures of Pinocchio (1883) is a canonical piece of children's literature and one of the best-selling books ever published.[79]

A separate genre of children's literature only began to emerge in the eighteenth century, with the development of the concept of childhood.[80]: x–xi  The earliest of these books were educational books, books on conduct, and simple ABCs—often decorated with animals, plants, and anthropomorphic letters.[81]

Aesthetics

Literary theory

A fundamental question of literary theory is "what is literature?" – although many contemporary theorists and literary scholars believe either that "literature" cannot be defined or that it can refer to any use of language.[82]

Literary fiction

 
Dante, Homer and Virgil in Raphael's Parnassus fresco (1511), key figures in the Western canon

Literary fiction is a term used to describe fiction that explores any facet of the human condition, and may involve social commentary. It is often regarded as having more artistic merit than genre fiction, especially the most commercially oriented types, but this has been contested in recent years, with the serious study of genre fiction within universities.[83]

The following, by the award-winning British author William Boyd on the short story, might be applied to all prose fiction:

[short stories] seem to answer something very deep in our nature as if, for the duration of its telling, something special has been created, some essence of our experience extrapolated, some temporary sense has been made of our common, turbulent journey towards the grave and oblivion.[84]

The very best in literature is annually recognized by the Nobel Prize in Literature, which is awarded to an author from any country who has, in the words of the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" (original Swedish: den som inom litteraturen har producerat det mest framstående verket i en idealisk riktning).[85][86]

The value of imaginative literature

Some researchers suggest that literary fiction can play a role in an individual's psychological development.[87] Psychologists have also been using literature as a therapeutic tool.[88][89] Psychologist Hogan argues for the value of the time and emotion that a person devotes to understanding a character's situation in literature;[90] that it can unite a large community by provoking universal emotions, as well as allowing readers access to different cultures, and new emotional experiences.[91] One study, for example, suggested that the presence of familiar cultural values in literary texts played an important impact on the performance of minority students.[92]

Psychologist Maslow's ideas help literary critics understand how characters in literature reflect their personal culture and the history.[93] The theory suggests that literature helps an individual's struggle for self-fulfillment.[94][95]

The influence of religious texts

Religion has had a major influence on literature, through works like the Vedas, the Torah, the Bible,[96] and the Qur'an.[97][98][99]

The King James Version of the Bible has been called "the most influential version of the most influential book in the world, in what is now its most influential language", "the most important book in English religion and culture", and "the most celebrated book in the English-speaking world"[citation needed] - principally because of its literary style and widespread distribution. Prominent atheist figures such as the late Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins have praised the King James Version as being "a giant step in the maturing of English literature" and "a great work of literature", respectively, with Dawkins then adding, "A native speaker of English who has never read a word of the King James Bible is verging on the barbarian".[100][101]

Societies in which preaching has great importance, and those in which religious structures and authorities have a near-monopoly of reading and writing and/or a censorship role, may impart a religious gloss to much of the literature those societies produce or retain - as for example in the European Middle Ages. The traditions of close study of religious texts has furthered the development of techniques and theories in literary studies.

Types

Poetry

 
A calligram by Guillaume Apollinaire. These are a type of poem in which the written words are arranged in such a way to produce a visual image.

Poetry has traditionally been distinguished from prose by its greater use of the aesthetic qualities of language, including musical devices such as assonance, alliteration, rhyme, and rhythm, and by being set in lines and verses rather than paragraphs, and more recently its use of other typographical elements.[102][103][104] This distinction is complicated by various hybrid forms such as sound poetry, concrete poetry and prose poem,[105] and more generally by the fact that prose possesses rhythm.[106] Abram Lipsky refers to it as an "open secret" that "prose is not distinguished from poetry by lack of rhythm".[107]

Prior to the 19th century, poetry was commonly understood to be something set in metrical lines: "any kind of subject consisting of Rhythm or Verses".[102] Possibly as a result of Aristotle's influence (his Poetics), "poetry" before the 19th century was usually less a technical designation for verse than a normative category of fictive or rhetorical art.[clarification needed][108] As a form it may pre-date literacy, with the earliest works being composed within and sustained by an oral tradition;[109][110] hence it constitutes the earliest example of literature.

Prose

As noted above, prose generally makes far less use of the aesthetic qualities of language than poetry.[103][104][111] However, developments in modern literature, including free verse and prose poetry have tended to blur the differences, and American poet T.S. Eliot suggested that while: "the distinction between verse and prose is clear, the distinction between poetry and prose is obscure".[112] There are verse novels, a type of narrative poetry in which a novel-length narrative is told through the medium of poetry rather than prose. Eugene Onegin (1831) by Alexander Pushkin is the most famous example.[113]

On the historical development of prose, Richard Graff notes that "[In the case of ancient Greece] recent scholarship has emphasized the fact that formal prose was a comparatively late development, an "invention" properly associated with the classical period".[114]

Latin was a major influence on the development of prose in many European countries. Especially important was the great Roman orator Cicero.[115] It was the lingua franca among literate Europeans until quite recent times, and the great works of Descartes (1596 – 1650), Francis Bacon (1561 – 1626), and Baruch Spinoza (1632 – 1677) were published in Latin. Among the last important books written primarily in Latin prose were the works of Swedenborg (d. 1772), Linnaeus (d. 1778), Euler (d. 1783), Gauss (d. 1855), and Isaac Newton (d. 1727).

Novel

 
Sculpture in Berlin depicting a stack of books on which are inscribed the names of great German writers

A novel is a long fictional prose narrative. In English, the term emerged from the Romance languages in the late 15th century, with the meaning of "news"; it came to indicate something new, without a distinction between fact or fiction.[116] The romance is a closely related long prose narrative. Walter Scott defined it as "a fictitious narrative in prose or verse; the interest of which turns upon marvelous and uncommon incidents", whereas in the novel "the events are accommodated to the ordinary train of human events and the modern state of society".[117] Other European languages do not distinguish between romance and novel: "a novel is le roman, der Roman, il romanzo",[118] indicates the proximity of the forms.[119]

Although there are many historical prototypes, so-called "novels before the novel",[120] the modern novel form emerges late in cultural history—roughly during the eighteenth century.[121] Initially subject to much criticism, the novel has acquired a dominant position amongst literary forms, both popularly and critically.[119][122][123]

Novella

The publisher Melville House classifies the novella as "too short to be a novel, too long to be a short story".[124] Publishers and literary award societies typically consider a novella to be between 17,000 and 40,000 words.[125]

Short story

A dilemma in defining the "short story" as a literary form is how to, or whether one should, distinguish it from any short narrative and its contested origin,[126] that include the Bible, and Edgar Allan Poe.[127]

Graphic novel

Graphic novels and comic books present stories told in a combination of artwork, dialogue, and text.

Electronic literature

Electronic literature is a literary genre consisting of works created exclusively on and for digital devices.

Nonfiction

Common literary examples of nonfiction include, the essay; travel literature and nature writing; biography, autobiography and memoir; journalism; letters; journals; history, philosophy, economics; scientific, and technical writings.[4][128]

Nonfiction can fall within the broad category of literature as "any collection of written work", but some works fall within the narrower definition "by virtue of the excellence of their writing, their originality and their general aesthetic and artistic merits".[129]

Drama

 
Cover of a 1921 libretto for Giordano's opera Andrea Chénier

Drama is literature intended for performance.[130] The form is combined with music and dance in opera and musical theatre (see libretto). A play is a written dramatic work by a playwright that is intended for performance in a theatre; it comprises chiefly dialogue between characters. A closet drama, by contrast, is written to be read rather than to be performed; the meaning of which can be realized fully on the page.[131] Nearly all drama took verse form until comparatively recently.

The earliest form of which there exists substantial knowledge is Greek drama. This developed as a performance associated with religious and civic festivals, typically enacting or developing upon well-known historical, or mythological themes,

In the twentieth century scripts written for non-stage media have been added to this form, including radio, television and film.

Law

Law and literature

The law and literature movement focuses on the interdisciplinary connection between law and literature.

Copyright

 
The Library of the Palais Bourbon in Paris

Copyright is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the exclusive right to make copies of a creative work, usually for a limited time.[132][133][134][135][136] The creative work may be in a literary, artistic, educational, or musical form. Copyright is intended to protect the original expression of an idea in the form of a creative work, but not the idea itself.[137][138][139]

United Kingdom

Literary works have been protected by copyright law from unauthorized reproduction since at least 1710.[140] Literary works are defined by copyright law to mean "any work, other than a dramatic or musical work, which is written, spoken or sung, and accordingly includes (a) a table or compilation (other than a database), (b) a computer program, (c) preparatory design material for a computer program, and (d) a database."[141]

Literary works are all works of literature; that is all works expressed in print or writing (other than dramatic or musical works).[142]

United States

The copyright law of the United States has a long and complicated history, dating back to colonial times. It was established as federal law with the Copyright Act of 1790. This act was updated many times, including a major revision in 1976.

European Union

The copyright law of the European Union is the copyright law applicable within the European Union. Copyright law is largely harmonized in the Union, although country to country differences exist. The body of law was implemented in the EU through a number of directives, which the member states need to enact into their national law. The main copyright directives are the Copyright Term Directive, the Information Society Directive and the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. Copyright in the Union is furthermore dependent on international conventions to which the European Union is a member (such as the TRIPS Agreement and conventions to which all Member States are parties (such as the Berne Convention)).

Copyright in communist countries

Copyright in Japan

Japan was a party to the original Berne convention in 1899, so its copyright law is in sync with most international regulations. The convention protected copyrighted works for 50 years after the author's death (or 50 years after publication for unknown authors and corporations). However, in 2004 Japan extended the copyright term to 70 years for cinematographic works. At the end of 2018, as a result of the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, the 70 year term was applied to all works.[143] This new term is not applied retroactively; works that had entered the public domain between 1999 and 2018 by expiration would remain in the public domain.

Censorship

 
Soviet poet Anna Akhmatova (1922), whose works were condemned and censored by the Stalinist authorities

Censorship of literature is employed by states, religious organizations, educational institutions, etc., to control what can be portrayed, spoken, performed, or written.[144] Generally such bodies attempt to ban works for political reasons, or because they deal with other controversial matters such as race, or sex.[145]

A notorious example of censorship is James Joyce's novel Ulysses, which has been described by Russian-American novelist Vladimir Nabokov as a "divine work of art" and the greatest masterpiece of 20th century prose.[146] It was banned in the United States from 1921 until 1933 on the grounds of obscenity. Nowadays it is a central literary text in English literature courses, throughout the world.[147]

Awards

There are numerous awards recognizing achievement and contribution in literature. Given the diversity of the field, awards are typically limited in scope, usually on: form, genre, language, nationality and output (e.g. for first-time writers or debut novels).[148]

The Nobel Prize in Literature was one of the six Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895,[149] and is awarded to an author on the basis of their body of work, rather than to, or for, a particular work itself.[note 2] Other literary prizes for which all nationalities are eligible include: the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, the Man Booker International Prize, Pulitzer Prize, Hugo Award, Guardian First Book Award and the Franz Kafka Prize.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The definition of rhetoric is a controversial subject within the field and has given rise to philological battles over its meaning in Ancient Greece.[29]
  2. ^ However, in some instances a work has been cited in the explanation of why the award was given.

References

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  2. ^ Goody, Jack. "Oral literature". Encyclopaedia Britannica. from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2020.; see also Homer.
  3. ^ a b Rexroth, Kenneth. "literature | Definition, Characteristics, Genres, Types, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 29 July 2020. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
  4. ^ a b OED
  5. ^ "literature (n.)". Online Etymology Dictionary. from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  6. ^ Meyer, Jim (1997). "What is Literature? A Definition Based on Prototypes". Work Papers of the Summer Institute of Linguistics and University of North Dakota Session. 41 (1). Retrieved 11 February 2014.[dead link]
  7. ^ Finnegan, Ruth (1974). "How Oral Is Oral Literature?". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 37 (1): 52–64. doi:10.1017/s0041977x00094842. JSTOR 614104. S2CID 190730645. (subscription required)
  8. ^ Field, Syd (29 November 2005). "Introduction". Screenplay: The Foundations of Screenwriting. Delta. ISBN 978038533903. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)
  9. ^ Leitch et al., The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism, 28
  10. ^ Eagleton 2008, p. 9.
  11. ^ Biswas, Critique of Poetics, 538
  12. ^ "Oral literature". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 14 December 2019. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
  13. ^ a b Johnson, Sian (26 February 2020). "Study dates Victorian volcano that buried a human-made axe". ABC News. from the original on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  14. ^ Matchan, Erin L.; Phillips, David; Jourdan, Fred; Oostingh, Korien (2020). "Early human occupation of southeastern Australia: New insights from 40Ar/39Ar dating of young volcanoes". Geology. 48 (4): 390–394. Bibcode:2020Geo....48..390M. doi:10.1130/G47166.1. ISSN 0091-7613. S2CID 214357121.
  15. ^ a b John Miles Foley. "What's in a Sign" (1999). E. Anne MacKay (ed.). Signs of Orality. BRILL Academic. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-9004112735.
  16. ^ Francis, Norbert (2017). Bilingual and multicultural perspectives on poetry, music and narrative 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine: The science of art. Lanham MD: Rowman and Littlefield.
  17. ^ Donald S. Lopez Jr. (1995). "Authority and Orality in the Mahāyāna" (PDF). Numen. Brill Academic. 42 (1): 21–47. doi:10.1163/1568527952598800. hdl:2027.42/43799. JSTOR 3270278. (PDF) from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
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Bibliography

  • A.R. Biswas (2005). Critique of Poetics (vol. 2). Atlantic Publishers & Dist. ISBN 978-81-269-0377-1. from the original on 14 April 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  • Jeremy Black; Graham Cunningham; Eleanor Robson, eds. (2006). The literature of ancient Sumer. Oxford: OUP. ISBN 978-0-19-929633-0.
  • Cain, William E.; Finke, Laurie A.; Johnson, Barbara E.; McGowan, John; Williams, Jeffrey J. (2001). Vincent B. Leitch (ed.). The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-97429-4.
  • Eagleton, Terry (2008). Literary Theory: An Introduction (Anniversary, 2nd ed.). Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-7921-8.
  • Flood, Gavin (1996). An Introduction to Hinduism. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-43878-0.
  • Hogan, P. Colm (2011). What Literature Teaches Us about Emotion. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Foster, John Lawrence (2001), Ancient Egyptian Literature: An Anthology, Austin: University of Texas Press, p. xx, ISBN 978-0-292-72527-0
  • Giraldi, William (2008). (PDF). The Southern Review: 793–801. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 15 February 2014.
  • Goody, Jack (2006). "From Oral to Written: An Anthropological Breakthrough in Storytelling". In Franco Moretti (ed.). The Novel, Volume 1: History, Geography, and Culture. Princeton: Princeton UP. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-691-04947-2.
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Further reading

  • Bonheim, Helmut (1982). The Narrative Modes: Techniques of the Short Story. Cambridge: Brewer. An overview of several hundred short stories.
  • Gillespie, Gerald (January 1967). "Novella, nouvelle, novella, short novel? — A review of terms". Neophilologus. 51 (1): 117–127. doi:10.1007/BF01511303. S2CID 162102536.
  • Wheeler, L. Kip. "Periods of Literary History" (PDF). Carson-Newman University. (PDF) from the original on 1 March 2008. Retrieved 18 March 2014. Brief summary of major periods in literary history of the Western tradition.

External links

  • Project Gutenberg Online Library
  • similar to IMDb but for books (archived 7 February 2007)
  • Digital eBook Collection – Internet Archive

literature, another, card, game, collection, written, work, also, used, more, narrowly, writings, specifically, considered, form, especially, prose, fiction, drama, poetry, recent, centuries, definition, expanded, include, oral, literature, much, which, been, . For another use see Literature card game Literature is any collection of written work but it is also used more narrowly for writings specifically considered to be an art form especially prose fiction drama and poetry 1 In recent centuries the definition has expanded to include oral literature much of which has been transcribed 2 Literature is a method of recording preserving and transmitting knowledge and entertainment and can also have a social psychological spiritual or political role Literature as an art form can also include works in various non fiction genres such as biography diaries memoir letters and essays Within its broad definition literature includes non fictional books articles or other printed information on a particular subject 3 4 Etymologically the term derives from Latin literatura litteratura code lat promoted to code la learning a writing grammar originally writing formed with letters from litera littera code lat promoted to code la letter 5 In spite of this the term has also been applied to spoken or sung texts 6 7 Literature is often referred to synecdochically as writing and poetically as the craft of writing or simply the craft Syd Field described his discipline screenwriting as a craft that occasionally rises to the level of art 8 Developments in print technology have allowed an ever growing distribution and proliferation of written works which now includes electronic literature Contents 1 Definitions 2 History 2 1 Oral literature 2 1 1 Oratory 2 2 Writing 2 3 Early written literature 2 4 Publishing 2 5 University discipline 2 5 1 In England 2 5 2 America 2 6 Women and literature 2 7 Children s literature 3 Aesthetics 3 1 Literary theory 3 2 Literary fiction 3 3 The value of imaginative literature 4 The influence of religious texts 5 Types 5 1 Poetry 5 2 Prose 5 2 1 Novel 5 2 2 Novella 5 2 3 Short story 5 2 4 Graphic novel 5 2 5 Electronic literature 5 2 6 Nonfiction 5 3 Drama 6 Law 6 1 Law and literature 6 2 Copyright 6 2 1 United Kingdom 6 2 2 United States 6 2 3 European Union 6 2 4 Copyright in communist countries 6 2 5 Copyright in Japan 6 3 Censorship 7 Awards 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinitions EditDefinitions of literature have varied over time 9 In Western Europe prior to the 18th century literature denoted all books and writing Literature can be seen as returning to older more inclusive notions so that cultural studies for instance include in addition to canonical works popular and minority genres The word is also used in reference to non written works to oral literature and the literature of preliterate culture A value judgment definition of literature considers it as consisting solely of high quality writing that forms part of the belles lettres fine writing tradition 10 An example of this is in the 1910 11 Encyclopaedia Britannica that classified literature as the best expression of the best thought reduced to writing 11 History EditMain article History of literature Oral literature Edit A traditional Kyrgyz manaschi performing part of the Epic of Manas at a yurt camp in Karakol KyrgyzstanThe use of the term literature here is a little problematic because of its origins in the Latin littera letter essentially writing Alternatives such as oral forms and oral genres have been suggested but the word literature is widely used 12 Australian Aboriginal culture has thrived on oral traditions and oral histories passed down through tens of thousands of years In a study published in February 2020 new evidence showed that both Budj Bim and Tower Hill volcanoes erupted between 34 000 and 40 000 years ago 13 Significantly this is a minimum age constraint for human presence in Victoria and also could be interpreted as evidence for the oral histories of the Gunditjmara people an Aboriginal Australian people of south western Victoria which tell of volcanic eruptions being some of the oldest oral traditions in existence 14 An axe found underneath volcanic ash in 1947 had already proven that humans inhabited the region before the eruption of Tower Hill 13 Oral literature is an ancient human tradition found in all corners of the world 15 Modern archaeology has been unveiling evidence of the human efforts to preserve and transmit arts and knowledge that depended completely or partially on an oral tradition across various cultures The Judeo Christian Bible reveals its oral traditional roots medieval European manuscripts are penned by performing scribes geometric vases from archaic Greece mirror Homer s oral style Indeed if these final decades of the millennium have taught us anything it must be that oral tradition never was the other we accused it of being it never was the primitive preliminary technology of communication we thought it to be Rather if the whole truth is told oral tradition stands out as the single most dominant communicative technology of our species as both a historical fact and in many areas still a contemporary reality 15 The earliest poetry is believed to have been recited or sung employed as a way of remembering history genealogy and law 16 In Asia the transmission of folklore mythologies as well as scriptures in ancient India in different Indian religions was by oral tradition preserved with precision with the help of elaborate mnemonic techniques 17 The early Buddhist texts are also generally believed to be of oral tradition with the first by comparing inconsistencies in the transmitted versions of literature from various oral societies such as the Greek Serbia and other cultures then noting that the Vedic literature is too consistent and vast to have been composed and transmitted orally across generations without being written down 18 According to Goody the Vedic texts likely involved both a written and oral tradition calling it a parallel products of a literate society 19 All ancient Greek literature was to some degree oral in nature and the earliest literature was completely so 20 Homer s epic poetry states Michael Gagarin was largely composed performed and transmitted orally 21 As folklores and legends were performed in front of distant audiences the singers would substitute the names in the stories with local characters or rulers to give the stories a local flavor and thus connect with the audience but making the historicity embedded in the oral tradition as unreliable 22 The lack of surviving texts about the Greek and Roman religious traditions have led scholars to presume that these were ritualistic and transmitted as oral traditions but some scholars disagree that the complex rituals in the ancient Greek and Roman civilizations were an exclusive product of an oral tradition 23 Writing systems are not known to have existed among Native North Americans before contact with Europeans Oral storytelling traditions flourished in a context without the use of writing to record and preserve history scientific knowledge and social practices 24 While some stories were told for amusement and leisure most functioned as practical lessons from tribal experience applied to immediate moral social psychological and environmental issues 25 Stories fuse fictional supernatural or otherwise exaggerated characters and circumstances with real emotions and morals as a means of teaching Plots often reflect real life situations and may be aimed at particular people known by the story s audience In this way social pressure could be exerted without directly causing embarrassment or social exclusion 26 For example rather than yelling Inuit parents might deter their children from wandering too close to the water s edge by telling a story about a sea monster with a pouch for children within its reach 27 See also African literature Oral literature Oratory Edit Oratory or the art of public speaking was for long considered a literary art 3 From Ancient Greece to the late 19th century rhetoric played a central role in Western education in training orators lawyers counselors historians statesmen and poets 28 note 1 Writing Edit Further information History of writing Limestone Kish tablet from Sumer with pictographic writing may be the earliest known writing 3500 BC Ashmolean Museum Around the 4th millennium BC the complexity of trade and administration in Mesopotamia outgrew human memory and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form 30 Though in both ancient Egypt and Mesoamerica writing may have already emerged because of the need to record historical and environmental events Subsequent innovations included more uniform predictable legal systems sacred texts and the origins of modern practices of scientific inquiry and knowledge consolidation all largely reliant on portable and easily reproducible forms of writing Early written literature Edit Main articles History of literature Ancient literature and History of books Ancient Egyptian literature 31 along with Sumerian literature are considered the world s oldest literatures 32 The primary genres of the literature of ancient Egypt didactic texts hymns and prayers and tales were written almost entirely in verse 33 By the Old Kingdom 26th century BC to 22nd century BC literary works included funerary texts epistles and letters hymns and poems and commemorative autobiographical texts recounting the careers of prominent administrative officials It was not until the early Middle Kingdom 21st century BC to 17th century BC that a narrative Egyptian literature was created 34 Many works of early periods even in narrative form had a covert moral or didactic purpose such as the Sanskrit Panchatantra 200 BC 300 AD based on older oral tradition 35 36 Drama and satire also developed as urban culture provided a larger public audience and later readership for literary production Lyric poetry as opposed to epic poetry was often the speciality of courts and aristocratic circles particularly in East Asia where songs were collected by the Chinese aristocracy as poems the most notable being the Shijing or Book of Songs 1046 c 600 BC 37 38 39 Egyptian hieroglyphs with cartouches for the name Ramesses II from the Luxor Temple New Kingdom In ancient China early literature was primarily focused on philosophy historiography military science agriculture and poetry China the origin of modern paper making and woodblock printing produced the world s first print cultures 40 Much of Chinese literature originates with the Hundred Schools of Thought period that occurred during the Eastern Zhou Dynasty 769 269 BC 41 The most important of these include the Classics of Confucianism of Daoism of Mohism of Legalism as well as works of military science e g Sun Tzu s The Art of War c 5th century BC and Chinese history e g Sima Qian s Records of the Grand Historian c 94 BC Ancient Chinese literature had a heavy emphasis on historiography with often very detailed court records An exemplary piece of narrative history of ancient China was the Zuo Zhuan which was compiled no later than 389 BC and attributed to the blind 5th century BC historian Zuo Qiuming 42 In ancient India literature originated from stories that were originally orally transmitted Early genres included drama fables sutras and epic poetry Sanskrit literature begins with the Vedas dating back to 1500 1000 BC and continues with the Sanskrit Epics of Iron Age India 43 44 The Vedas are among the oldest sacred texts The Samhitas vedic collections date to roughly 1500 1000 BC and the circum Vedic texts as well as the redaction of the Samhitas date to c 1000 500 BC resulting in a Vedic period spanning the mid 2nd to mid 1st millennium BC or the Late Bronze Age and the Iron Age 45 The period between approximately the 6th to 1st centuries BC saw the composition and redaction of the two most influential Indian epics the Mahabharata 46 47 and the Ramayana 48 with subsequent redaction progressing down to the 4th century AD Other major literary works are Ramcharitmanas 49 amp Krishnacharitmanas The earliest known Greek writings are Mycenaean c 1600 1100 BC written in the Linear B syllabary on clay tablets These documents contain prosaic records largely concerned with trade lists inventories receipts etc no real literature has been discovered 50 51 Michael Ventris and John Chadwick the original decipherers of Linear B state that literature almost certainly existed in Mycenaean Greece 51 but it was either not written down or if it was it was on parchment or wooden tablets which did not survive the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces in the twelfth century BC 51 Homer s epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey are central works of ancient Greek literature It is generally accepted that the poems were composed at some point around the late eighth or early seventh century BC 52 Modern scholars consider these accounts legendary 53 54 55 Most researchers believe that the poems were originally transmitted orally 56 From antiquity until the present day the influence of Homeric epic on Western civilization has been great inspiring many of its most famous works of literature music art and film 57 The Homeric epics were the greatest influence on ancient Greek culture and education to Plato Homer was simply the one who has taught Greece ten Hellada pepaideuken 58 59 Hesiod s Works and Days c 700 BC and Theogony are some of the earliest and most influential of ancient Greek literature Classical Greek genres included philosophy poetry historiography comedies and dramas Plato 428 427 or 424 423 348 347 BC and Aristotle 384 322 BC authored philosophical texts that are the foundation of Western philosophy Sappho c 630 c 570 BC and Pindar were influential lyric poets and Herodotus c 484 c 425 BC and Thucydides were early Greek historians Although drama was popular in ancient Greece of the hundreds of tragedies written and performed during the classical age only a limited number of plays by three authors still exist Aeschylus Sophocles and Euripides The plays of Aristophanes c 446 c 386 BC provide the only real examples of a genre of comic drama known as Old Comedy the earliest form of Greek Comedy and are in fact used to define the genre 60 The Hebrew religious text the Torah is widely seen as a product of the Persian period 539 333 BC probably 450 350 BC 61 This consensus echoes a traditional Jewish view which gives Ezra the leader of the Jewish community on its return from Babylon a pivotal role in its promulgation 62 This represents a major source of Christianity s Bible which has had a major influence on Western literature 63 The beginning of Roman literature dates to 240 BC when a Roman audience saw a Latin version of a Greek play 64 Literature in Latin would flourish for the next six centuries and includes essays histories poems plays and other writings The Qur an 610 AD to 632 AD 65 the main holy book of Islam had a significant influence on the Arab language and marked the beginning of Islamic literature Muslims believe it was transcribed in the Arabic dialect of the Quraysh the tribe of Muhammad 26 66 As Islam spread the Quran had the effect of unifying and standardizing Arabic 26 Theological works in Latin were the dominant form of literature in Europe typically found in libraries during the Middle Ages Western Vernacular literature includes the Poetic Edda and the sagas or heroic epics of Iceland the Anglo Saxon Beowulf and the German Song of Hildebrandt A later form of medieval fiction was the romance an adventurous and sometimes magical narrative with strong popular appeal 67 Controversial religious political and instructional literature proliferated during the European Renaissance as a result of the Johannes Gutenberg s invention of the printing press 68 around 1440 while the Medieval romance developed into the novel 69 Publishing Edit The intricate frontispiece of the Diamond Sutra from Tang dynasty China the world s earliest dated printed book AD 868 British Library Publishing became possible with the invention of writing but became more practical with the invention of printing Prior to printing distributed works were copied manually by scribes The Chinese inventor Bi Sheng made movable type of earthenware c 1045 Then c 1450 Johannes Gutenberg independently invented movable type in Europe This invention gradually made books less expensive to produce and more widely available Early printed books single sheets and images created before 1501 in Europe are known as incunables or incunabula A man born in 1453 the year of the fall of Constantinople could look back from his fiftieth year on a lifetime in which about eight million books had been printed more perhaps than all the scribes of Europe had produced since Constantine founded his city in A D 330 70 Eventually printing enabled other forms of publishing besides books The history of modern newspaper publishing started in Germany in 1609 with publishing of magazines following in 1663 University discipline Edit In England Edit Main article English studies In England in the late 1820s growing political and social awareness particularly among the utilitarians and Benthamites promoted the possibility of including courses in English literary study in the newly formed London University This further developed into the idea of the study of literature being the ideal carrier for the propagation of the humanist cultural myth of a well educated culturally harmonious nation 71 America Edit Main article American literature academic discipline Women and literature Edit Further information French literature German literature Russian literature and English poetry Women poets in the 18th century The widespread education of women was not common until the nineteenth century and because of this literature until recently was mostly male dominated 72 George Sand was an idea She has a unique place in our age Others are great men she was a great woman Victor Hugo Les funerailles de George Sand 73 There were few English language women poets whose names are remembered until the twentieth century In the nineteenth century some names that stand out are Emily Bronte Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Emily Dickinson see American poetry But while generally women are absent from the European cannon of Romantic literature there is one notable exception the French novelist and memoirist Amantine Dupin 1804 1876 best known by her pen name George Sand 74 75 One of the more popular writers in Europe in her lifetime 76 being more renowned than both Victor Hugo and Honore de Balzac in England in the 1830s and 1840s 77 Sand is recognised as one of the most notable writers of the European Romantic era Jane Austen 1775 1817 is the first major English woman novelist while Aphra Behn is an early female dramatist Nobel Prizes in Literature have been awarded between 1901 and 2020 to 117 individuals 101 men and 16 women Selma Lagerlof 1858 1940 was the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature which she was awarded in 1909 Additionally she was the first woman to be granted a membership in The Swedish Academy in 1914 78 Feminist scholars have since the twentieth century sought expand the literary canon to include more women writers Children s literature Edit The Adventures of Pinocchio 1883 is a canonical piece of children s literature and one of the best selling books ever published 79 A separate genre of children s literature only began to emerge in the eighteenth century with the development of the concept of childhood 80 x xi The earliest of these books were educational books books on conduct and simple ABCs often decorated with animals plants and anthropomorphic letters 81 Aesthetics EditFurther information Aesthetic judgment and Value judgment Literary theory Edit Further information Literary theory and Philosophy and literature The philosophy of literature A fundamental question of literary theory is what is literature although many contemporary theorists and literary scholars believe either that literature cannot be defined or that it can refer to any use of language 82 Literary fiction Edit Further information Western canon Literary canon Dante Homer and Virgil in Raphael s Parnassus fresco 1511 key figures in the Western canon Literary fiction is a term used to describe fiction that explores any facet of the human condition and may involve social commentary It is often regarded as having more artistic merit than genre fiction especially the most commercially oriented types but this has been contested in recent years with the serious study of genre fiction within universities 83 The following by the award winning British author William Boyd on the short story might be applied to all prose fiction short stories seem to answer something very deep in our nature as if for the duration of its telling something special has been created some essence of our experience extrapolated some temporary sense has been made of our common turbulent journey towards the grave and oblivion 84 The very best in literature is annually recognized by the Nobel Prize in Literature which is awarded to an author from any country who has in the words of the will of Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel produced in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction original Swedish den som inom litteraturen har producerat det mest framstaende verket i en idealisk riktning 85 86 The value of imaginative literature Edit Some researchers suggest that literary fiction can play a role in an individual s psychological development 87 Psychologists have also been using literature as a therapeutic tool 88 89 Psychologist Hogan argues for the value of the time and emotion that a person devotes to understanding a character s situation in literature 90 that it can unite a large community by provoking universal emotions as well as allowing readers access to different cultures and new emotional experiences 91 One study for example suggested that the presence of familiar cultural values in literary texts played an important impact on the performance of minority students 92 Psychologist Maslow s ideas help literary critics understand how characters in literature reflect their personal culture and the history 93 The theory suggests that literature helps an individual s struggle for self fulfillment 94 95 The influence of religious texts EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2020 Further information Islamic literature and King James Version Influence Religion has had a major influence on literature through works like the Vedas the Torah the Bible 96 and the Qur an 97 98 99 The King James Version of the Bible has been called the most influential version of the most influential book in the world in what is now its most influential language the most important book in English religion and culture and the most celebrated book in the English speaking world citation needed principally because of its literary style and widespread distribution Prominent atheist figures such as the late Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins have praised the King James Version as being a giant step in the maturing of English literature and a great work of literature respectively with Dawkins then adding A native speaker of English who has never read a word of the King James Bible is verging on the barbarian 100 101 Societies in which preaching has great importance and those in which religious structures and authorities have a near monopoly of reading and writing and or a censorship role may impart a religious gloss to much of the literature those societies produce or retain as for example in the European Middle Ages The traditions of close study of religious texts has furthered the development of techniques and theories in literary studies Types EditPoetry Edit A calligram by Guillaume Apollinaire These are a type of poem in which the written words are arranged in such a way to produce a visual image Poetry has traditionally been distinguished from prose by its greater use of the aesthetic qualities of language including musical devices such as assonance alliteration rhyme and rhythm and by being set in lines and verses rather than paragraphs and more recently its use of other typographical elements 102 103 104 This distinction is complicated by various hybrid forms such as sound poetry concrete poetry and prose poem 105 and more generally by the fact that prose possesses rhythm 106 Abram Lipsky refers to it as an open secret that prose is not distinguished from poetry by lack of rhythm 107 Prior to the 19th century poetry was commonly understood to be something set in metrical lines any kind of subject consisting of Rhythm or Verses 102 Possibly as a result of Aristotle s influence his Poetics poetry before the 19th century was usually less a technical designation for verse than a normative category of fictive or rhetorical art clarification needed 108 As a form it may pre date literacy with the earliest works being composed within and sustained by an oral tradition 109 110 hence it constitutes the earliest example of literature Prose Edit As noted above prose generally makes far less use of the aesthetic qualities of language than poetry 103 104 111 However developments in modern literature including free verse and prose poetry have tended to blur the differences and American poet T S Eliot suggested that while the distinction between verse and prose is clear the distinction between poetry and prose is obscure 112 There are verse novels a type of narrative poetry in which a novel length narrative is told through the medium of poetry rather than prose Eugene Onegin 1831 by Alexander Pushkin is the most famous example 113 On the historical development of prose Richard Graff notes that In the case of ancient Greece recent scholarship has emphasized the fact that formal prose was a comparatively late development an invention properly associated with the classical period 114 Latin was a major influence on the development of prose in many European countries Especially important was the great Roman orator Cicero 115 It was the lingua franca among literate Europeans until quite recent times and the great works of Descartes 1596 1650 Francis Bacon 1561 1626 and Baruch Spinoza 1632 1677 were published in Latin Among the last important books written primarily in Latin prose were the works of Swedenborg d 1772 Linnaeus d 1778 Euler d 1783 Gauss d 1855 and Isaac Newton d 1727 Novel Edit Sculpture in Berlin depicting a stack of books on which are inscribed the names of great German writers See also Genre fiction A novel is a long fictional prose narrative In English the term emerged from the Romance languages in the late 15th century with the meaning of news it came to indicate something new without a distinction between fact or fiction 116 The romance is a closely related long prose narrative Walter Scott defined it as a fictitious narrative in prose or verse the interest of which turns upon marvelous and uncommon incidents whereas in the novel the events are accommodated to the ordinary train of human events and the modern state of society 117 Other European languages do not distinguish between romance and novel a novel is le roman der Roman il romanzo 118 indicates the proximity of the forms 119 Although there are many historical prototypes so called novels before the novel 120 the modern novel form emerges late in cultural history roughly during the eighteenth century 121 Initially subject to much criticism the novel has acquired a dominant position amongst literary forms both popularly and critically 119 122 123 Novella Edit The publisher Melville House classifies the novella as too short to be a novel too long to be a short story 124 Publishers and literary award societies typically consider a novella to be between 17 000 and 40 000 words 125 Short story Edit A dilemma in defining the short story as a literary form is how to or whether one should distinguish it from any short narrative and its contested origin 126 that include the Bible and Edgar Allan Poe 127 Graphic novel Edit Graphic novels and comic books present stories told in a combination of artwork dialogue and text Electronic literature Edit Electronic literature is a literary genre consisting of works created exclusively on and for digital devices Nonfiction Edit Common literary examples of nonfiction include the essay travel literature and nature writing biography autobiography and memoir journalism letters journals history philosophy economics scientific and technical writings 4 128 Nonfiction can fall within the broad category of literature as any collection of written work but some works fall within the narrower definition by virtue of the excellence of their writing their originality and their general aesthetic and artistic merits 129 Drama Edit Cover of a 1921 libretto for Giordano s opera Andrea Chenier Drama is literature intended for performance 130 The form is combined with music and dance in opera and musical theatre see libretto A play is a written dramatic work by a playwright that is intended for performance in a theatre it comprises chiefly dialogue between characters A closet drama by contrast is written to be read rather than to be performed the meaning of which can be realized fully on the page 131 Nearly all drama took verse form until comparatively recently The earliest form of which there exists substantial knowledge is Greek drama This developed as a performance associated with religious and civic festivals typically enacting or developing upon well known historical or mythological themes In the twentieth century scripts written for non stage media have been added to this form including radio television and film Law EditLaw and literature Edit The law and literature movement focuses on the interdisciplinary connection between law and literature Copyright Edit Further information History of copyright The Library of the Palais Bourbon in Paris Copyright is a type of intellectual property that gives its owner the exclusive right to make copies of a creative work usually for a limited time 132 133 134 135 136 The creative work may be in a literary artistic educational or musical form Copyright is intended to protect the original expression of an idea in the form of a creative work but not the idea itself 137 138 139 United Kingdom Edit Literary works have been protected by copyright law from unauthorized reproduction since at least 1710 140 Literary works are defined by copyright law to mean any work other than a dramatic or musical work which is written spoken or sung and accordingly includes a a table or compilation other than a database b a computer program c preparatory design material for a computer program and d a database 141 Literary works are all works of literature that is all works expressed in print or writing other than dramatic or musical works 142 United States Edit The copyright law of the United States has a long and complicated history dating back to colonial times It was established as federal law with the Copyright Act of 1790 This act was updated many times including a major revision in 1976 European Union Edit The copyright law of the European Union is the copyright law applicable within the European Union Copyright law is largely harmonized in the Union although country to country differences exist The body of law was implemented in the EU through a number of directives which the member states need to enact into their national law The main copyright directives are the Copyright Term Directive the Information Society Directive and the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market Copyright in the Union is furthermore dependent on international conventions to which the European Union is a member such as the TRIPS Agreement and conventions to which all Member States are parties such as the Berne Convention Copyright in communist countries Edit Further information Copyright in Russia Copyright law of the Soviet Union and Intellectual property in China Copyright in Japan Edit Japan was a party to the original Berne convention in 1899 so its copyright law is in sync with most international regulations The convention protected copyrighted works for 50 years after the author s death or 50 years after publication for unknown authors and corporations However in 2004 Japan extended the copyright term to 70 years for cinematographic works At the end of 2018 as a result of the Trans Pacific Partnership negotiations the 70 year term was applied to all works 143 This new term is not applied retroactively works that had entered the public domain between 1999 and 2018 by expiration would remain in the public domain Censorship Edit Soviet poet Anna Akhmatova 1922 whose works were condemned and censored by the Stalinist authorities Further information Book censorship Theatre censorship and Film censorship Censorship of literature is employed by states religious organizations educational institutions etc to control what can be portrayed spoken performed or written 144 Generally such bodies attempt to ban works for political reasons or because they deal with other controversial matters such as race or sex 145 A notorious example of censorship is James Joyce s novel Ulysses which has been described by Russian American novelist Vladimir Nabokov as a divine work of art and the greatest masterpiece of 20th century prose 146 It was banned in the United States from 1921 until 1933 on the grounds of obscenity Nowadays it is a central literary text in English literature courses throughout the world 147 Awards EditThere are numerous awards recognizing achievement and contribution in literature Given the diversity of the field awards are typically limited in scope usually on form genre language nationality and output e g for first time writers or debut novels 148 The Nobel Prize in Literature was one of the six Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895 149 and is awarded to an author on the basis of their body of work rather than to or for a particular work itself note 2 Other literary prizes for which all nationalities are eligible include the Neustadt International Prize for Literature the Man Booker International Prize Pulitzer Prize Hugo Award Guardian First Book Award and the Franz Kafka Prize See also Edit Literature portal Writing portalOutline of literature Index of literature articlesLibrary Literary agent Literary element Literary magazine Reading Rhetorical modes Science fiction As serious literature Vernacular literatureNotes Edit The definition of rhetoric is a controversial subject within the field and has given rise to philological battles over its meaning in Ancient Greece 29 However in some instances a work has been cited in the explanation of why the award was given References Edit Literature definition Oxford Learner s Dictionaries Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 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Cite book cite book a Check isbn value length help Leitch et al The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism 28 Eagleton 2008 p 9 Biswas Critique of Poetics 538 Oral literature Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 14 December 2019 Retrieved 27 July 2020 a b Johnson Sian 26 February 2020 Study dates Victorian volcano that buried a human made axe ABC News Archived from the original on 8 September 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Matchan Erin L Phillips David Jourdan Fred Oostingh Korien 2020 Early human occupation of southeastern Australia New insights from 40Ar 39Ar dating of young volcanoes Geology 48 4 390 394 Bibcode 2020Geo 48 390M doi 10 1130 G47166 1 ISSN 0091 7613 S2CID 214357121 a b John Miles Foley What s in a Sign 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 1 2 ISBN 978 9004112735 Francis Norbert 2017 Bilingual and multicultural perspectives on poetry music and narrative Archived 10 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine The science of art Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield Donald S Lopez Jr 1995 Authority and Orality in the Mahayana PDF Numen Brill Academic 42 1 21 47 doi 10 1163 1568527952598800 hdl 2027 42 43799 JSTOR 3270278 Archived PDF from the original on 1 January 2011 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Buddhism The Pali canon Tipitaka Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 17 March 2023 Ong Walter J 2002 Orality and Literacy The Technologizing of the Word Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 28128 7 Reece Steve Orality and Literacy Ancient Greek Literature as Oral Literature in David Schenker and Martin Hose eds Companion to Greek Literature Oxford Blackwell 2015 43 57 Ancient Greek Literature as Oral Literature Archived 1 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine Michael Gagarin 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 163 164 ISBN 978 9004112735 Wolfgang Kullmann 1999 E Anne MacKay ed Signs of Orality BRILL Academic pp 108 109 ISBN 978 9004112735 John Scheid 2006 Clifford Ando and Jorg Rupke ed Religion and Law in Classical and Christian Rome Franz Steiner Verlag pp 17 28 ISBN 978 3 515 08854 1 Archived from the original on 20 August 2020 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 1 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 3 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 a b c Kroeber Karl ed 2004 Native American Storytelling A Reader of Myths and Legends Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 2 ISBN 978 1 4051 1541 4 Doucleff Michaeleen Greenhalgh Jane 13 March 2019 How Inuit Parents Teach Kids To Control Their Anger NPR Archived from the original on 26 October 2020 Retrieved 29 April 2019 See e g Thomas Conley Rhetoric in the European Tradition University of Chicago 1991 See for instance Parlor Burkean Johnstone Henry W 1996 On schiappa versus poulakos Rhetoric Review 14 2 438 440 doi 10 1080 07350199609389075 Green M W 1981 The Construction and Implementation of the Cuneiform Writing System Visible Language 15 4 345 372 Foster 2001 p 19 Black et al The Literature of Ancient Sumer xix Foster 2001 p 7 Lichtheim Miriam 1975 Ancient Egyptian Literature vol 1 London England University of California Press ISBN 0 520 02899 6 Jacobs 1888harvnb error no target CITEREFJacobs1888 help Introduction page xv Ryder 1925harvnb error no target CITEREFRyder1925 help Translator s introduction quoting Hertel the original work was composed in Kashmir about 200 B C At this date however many of the individual stories were already ancient Ryder 1925harvnb error no target CITEREFRyder1925 help Translator s introduction The Panchatantra is a niti shastra or textbook of niti The word niti means roughly the wise conduct of life Western civilization must endure a certain shame in realizing that no precise equivalent of the term is found in English French Latin or Greek Many words are therefore necessary to explain what niti is though the idea once grasped is clear important and satisfying Baxter 1992 p 356 sfnp error no target CITEREFBaxter1992 help Allan 1991 p 39 sfnp error no target CITEREFAllan1991 help Zheng Xuan 鄭玄 AD 127 200 Shipu xu 詩譜序 A Hyatt Mayor Prints and People Metropolitan Museum of Art Princeton 1971 nos 1 4 ISBN 0 691 00326 2 Chinese philosophy Archived 2 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica online Lin Liang Hung Ho Yu Ling 2009 Confucian dynamism culture and ethical changes in Chinese societies a comparative study of China Taiwan and Hong Kong The International Journal of Human Resource Management 20 11 2402 2417 doi 10 1080 09585190903239757 ISSN 0958 5192 S2CID 153789769 Archived from the original on 21 April 2021 Retrieved 21 October 2020 see e g Radhakrishnan amp Moore 1957 p 3harvnb error no target CITEREFRadhakrishnanMoore1957 help Witzel Michael Vedas and Upaniṣads in Flood 2003 p 68harvnb error no target CITEREFFlood2003 help MacDonell 2004 pp 29 39harvnb error no target CITEREFMacDonell2004 help Sanskrit literature 2003 in Philip s Encyclopedia Accessed 2007 08 09 Sanujit Ghose 2011 Religious Developments in Ancient India Archived 30 July 2022 at the Wayback Machine in Ancient History Encyclopedia Gavin Flood sums up mainstream estimates according to which the Rigveda was compiled from as early as 1500 BC over a period of several centuries Flood 1996 p 37 James G Lochtefeld 2002 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Hinduism A M The Rosen Publishing Group p 399 ISBN 978 0 8239 3179 8 Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2020 T R S Sharma June Gaur Sahitya Akademi New Delhi Inde 2000 Ancient Indian Literature An Anthology Sahitya Akademi p 137 ISBN 978 81 260 0794 3 Archived from the original on 19 October 2020 Retrieved 21 October 2020 Ramayana Summary Characters amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 12 April 2020 Retrieved 18 February 2020 Lutgendorf 1991 p 1 Chadwick John 1967 The Decipherment of Linear B Second ed Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p 101 ISBN 978 1 107 69176 6 The glimpse we have suddenly been given of the account books of a long forgotten people a b c Ventris Michael Chadwick John 1956 Documents in Mycenaean Greek Cambridge England Cambridge University Press p xxix ISBN 978 1 107 50341 0 Archived from the original on 14 April 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2020 Croally Neil Hyde Roy 2011 Classical Literature An Introduction Routledge p 26 ISBN 978 1136736629 Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 23 November 2016 Wilson Nigel 2013 Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece Routledge p 366 ISBN 978 1136788000 Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Romilly Jacqueline de 1985 A Short History of Greek Literature University of Chicago Press p 1 ISBN 978 0226143125 Archived from the original on 10 August 2017 Retrieved 22 November 2016 Graziosi Barbara 2002 Inventing Homer The Early Reception of Epic Cambridge University 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CITEREFRomer2008 help Riches John 2000 The Bible A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press p 134 ISBN 978 0 19 285343 1 Duckworth George Eckel The nature of Roman comedy a study in popular entertainment Archived 4 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine University of Oklahoma Press 1994 p 3 Web 15 October 2011 Donner Fred 2010 Muhammad and the Believers at the Origins of Islam London England Harvard University Press pp 153 154 ISBN 978 0 674 05097 6 الوثائقية تفتح ملف اللغة العربية الجزيرة الوثائقية in Arabic 8 September 2019 Archived from the original on 16 June 2022 Retrieved 18 June 2020 Western literature Medieval literature Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 29 April 2015 Retrieved 21 October 2020 Elizabeth L Eisenstein The Printing Press as an Agent of Change Cambridge University Press 1980 Margaret Anne Doody The True Story of the Novel New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 1996 rept 1997 p 1 Retrieved 21 October 2020 Clapham Michael Printing in 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Censorship The Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory 1977 revised by C E Preston Penguin Books 1998 pp 118 22 About Banned amp Challenged Books ala org 25 October 2016 Archived from the original on 8 April 2014 Retrieved 28 October 2020 Nabokov pp 55 57 full citation needed Ulysses has been called the most prominent landmark in modernist literature a work where life s complexities are depicted with unprecedented and unequalled linguistic and stylistic virtuosity The New York Times guide to essential knowledge 3d ed 2011 p 126 John Stock Kealey Rigden 15 October 2013 Man Booker 2013 Top 25 literary prizes The Telegraph Archived from the original on 15 October 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2014 Facts on the Nobel Prize in Literature Nobelprize org Nobel Media AB Archived from the original on 8 March 2014 Retrieved 8 March 2014 Bibliography Edit A R Biswas 2005 Critique of Poetics vol 2 Atlantic Publishers amp Dist ISBN 978 81 269 0377 1 Archived from the original on 14 April 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2020 Jeremy Black Graham Cunningham Eleanor Robson eds 2006 The literature of ancient Sumer Oxford OUP ISBN 978 0 19 929633 0 Cain William E Finke Laurie A Johnson Barbara E McGowan John Williams Jeffrey J 2001 Vincent B Leitch ed The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism Norton ISBN 978 0 393 97429 4 Eagleton Terry 2008 Literary Theory An Introduction Anniversary 2nd ed Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 7921 8 Flood Gavin 1996 An Introduction to Hinduism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43878 0 Hogan P Colm 2011 What Literature Teaches Us about Emotion New York Cambridge University Press Foster John Lawrence 2001 Ancient Egyptian Literature An Anthology Austin University of Texas Press p xx ISBN 978 0 292 72527 0 Giraldi William 2008 The Novella s Long Life PDF The Southern Review 793 801 Archived from the original PDF on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 15 February 2014 Goody Jack 2006 From Oral to Written An Anthropological Breakthrough in Storytelling In Franco Moretti ed The Novel Volume 1 History Geography and Culture Princeton Princeton UP p 18 ISBN 978 0 691 04947 2 Paris B J 1986 Third Force Psychology and the Study of Literature Cranbury Associated University Press Preminger Alex et al 1993 The New Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics US Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 02123 2 Ross Trevor 1996 The Emergence of Literature Making and Reading the English Canon in the Eighteenth Century PDF ELH 63 2 397 422 doi 10 1353 elh 1996 0019 S2CID 170813833 Archived PDF from the original on 21 February 2014 Retrieved 9 February 2014 Further reading EditBonheim Helmut 1982 The Narrative Modes Techniques of the Short Story Cambridge Brewer An overview of several hundred short stories Gillespie Gerald January 1967 Novella nouvelle novella short novel A review of terms Neophilologus 51 1 117 127 doi 10 1007 BF01511303 S2CID 162102536 Wheeler L Kip Periods of Literary History PDF Carson Newman University Archived PDF from the original on 1 March 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2014 Brief summary of major periods in literary history of the Western tradition External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Literature Project Gutenberg Online Library Internet Book List similar to IMDb but for books archived 7 February 2007 Digital eBook Collection Internet Archive Literature at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Literature amp oldid 1148658700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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