Literary Genres
In the last posts we made the following definitions:
The five functions of Literature
Now we will address literary
genres and literary schools. It is very important not to confuse these three
terms.
Textual genre encompasses all types of text, except
literary ones. Literary genre is classified according to its form, and can be
of the epic or narrative, lyrical and dramatic genres. The concept covers only
literary texts. For example, a cooking recipe is a textual genre, but it is not
a literary genre.
Text is man's way of expressing himself, not just in
writing. Everything that expresses a feeling, an order, and an action is a
text, even if it is not written. For example, a movie, a play or even a traffic
light.
That is right, a traffic light. When the traffic light
is red, the driver stops the car (or should stop). When the headlight turns
green, it starts. Realize that there was communication, and if there was
communication that is a text.
Aristotle and the Literary Genres
Literary genres are categories established for all
types of literary texts, according to common formal characteristics. These
texts are grouped according to structural, contextual and semantic criteria.
Aristotle defined the following three literary genres:
Narrative or epic
genre;
Lyrical genre;
Dramatic Genre.
The classification of literary genres has undergone
some changes over the years. Today it is more flexible, being possible to mix
genres and subdivision into several subgenres. Despite the division into
lyrical, narrative and dramatic, there is a common characteristic to the three
genres: Literature.
These genres have common aspects that define
Literature as an artistic expression that has recreational, social and critical
functions. Therefore, in addition to the expression of feelings and the
invention of stories by the author, there is also social, political and
historical criticism.
The literary text conveys the author's artistic notion
by using the connotative and poetic function of language, in prose or verse. He
also respects structures in style and form, such as meter and rhyme.
Narrative epic genre
Defined as the “epic genre” by Aristotle, it included
epics, historical-literary narratives of great events. The Greek poet Homer
(9th or 8th century BC) was the founder of epic poetry, to whom the
masterpieces “Iliad” and “Odyssey” are attributed. Another great example of
epic is the work “Os Lusíadas” by the Portuguese writer Luís de Camões. In
Brazil, the epic poems “Caramuru”, by Santa Rita Durão (1722-1784), and “O
Uruguai” by Basílio da Gama (1741-1795), both writers belonging to Arcadianism
in Brazil, deserve to be highlighted.
With the passage of time, these poetic narrations fell
into disuse and the term epic gave way to the term narrative. It is a modern
literary genre in prose, which aims to narrate a story with real or imaginary
events. To be considered narrative, a text needs the following elements:
Plot – story that narrates a
succession of events, with an introduction, development and conclusion;
Narrator – one who narrates the
story. Uses direct, indirect and/or free indirect speech.
Characters – people who are present
in the story.
Time – the period in which the
story takes place.
Space – where the story takes place.
Lyrical genre
It got its name from the reference to the lyre, a
musical instrument that accompanied the recitation of poetry in antiquity. It
includes poetic texts of a sentimental character that reveal the author's
emotions. It is characterized by the poetic function of language and the use of
words in their connotative sense with a predominance of the first person.
They are brief texts because they do not present a
plot, but rather the externalization of the poet's inner world (lyrical self).
The lyrical self, also called "lyrical subject" or "poetic
self", does not refer to the author of the text (real person) because it
is a fictitious entity (female or male), a creation of the poet, who plays the
role of narrator or enunciator of the poem. In other words, the lyrical self
represents the "voice of poetry".
The poems have a subjective character and musicality.
They are always divided into lines and stanzas. Verses are lines of text;
stanzas are sets of lines. The scansion is a syllabic division of verses that
can be termed as major redondilha (roundness), with
seven syllables or more and minor redondilha (roundness), with six syllables or
less.
Dramatic genre
Since antiquity, the dramatic genre, originating in
Greece, were theatrical texts essentially staged as a worship of the gods,
which were represented in religious festivals. Among the main authors of the
dramatic genre (tragedy and comedy) in ancient Greece are Sophocles (496-406
BC), Euripides (480-406 BC) and Aeschylus (524-456 BC). The staging of dramatic
genre texts aimed to arouse emotions in the audience, a phenomenon called
catharsis.
Its main feature is that it is made to be staged.
There is no narrator who tells the action, the plot being presented through the
speeches of the characters, represented by actors who experience the events.
Therefore, dialogues and monologues are of crucial importance.
The playwrights (authors of this type of text) and the
actors (who stage the text) are the transmitters. The receivers are the
audience that watches the play. In addition to being made up of characters
(protagonists, secondary characters or extras), they are made up of the scenic
space (theatrical stage and sets) and time.
Dramatic texts are subdivided into acts – when the
actions take place in the same space – and scenes – when there is a change of
location and characters – and present the name of the character who dialogues
before his speech, thus marking his entry into the scene. Generally, texts
intended for theater have the following basic internal structure:
Presentation – both the characters and the
action to be developed are exposed.
Conflict – the moment when the
shenanigans of dramatic action arise.
Denouement – moment of conclusion, closure
or denouement of the dramatic action.
In addition to the internal structure inherent to the
dramatic text, there is the external structure of the dramatic genre, such as
the acts (change of scenarios necessary for the representation) and scenes
(entry or exit) of the characters. Note that each scene corresponds to a unit
of dramatic action.
The structure of the
dramatic text, in verse or in prose, acts as a facilitator of dramatization as
it provides elements that help the representation, such as indications of the
scenario, music, lighting, costumes and other scenic indications, called
rubrics or didascalies, which guide the actor during the play.
In ancient Greece, didascalia (from the Greek didaskália = instruction, teaching) were the instructions that dramatic poets gave to actors for the scenic representation; sometimes they referred to theatrical performances or tragic festivals themselves. Thus, a text of the dramatic genre presents these two types of content: the direct speech of the characters and the scenic indications.
Literary schools
Literature is traditionally divided into Literary
Schools. This division may also be known as Literary Movements or Period
Styles. In this way, the subject becomes more didactic for the students.
This systematization aims to facilitate the study of the discipline, as
well as its teaching, since it groups writers according to their stylistic and
thematic characteristics, among other aspects, according to the historical
context in which they are inserted. It would be impossible to dissociate
Literature from History: these two areas of human knowledge go hand in hand,
and the influence of historical facts on the literary work of each period is
unquestionable.
The table above shows all literary schools in Europe and Brazil. We will
address this issue in the next post. After defining all the literary types, we
will then begin the literary journey to the present day.
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