One
Two
Three
Four
Five
100
"the process of analyzing a story using all the elements involved in its telling"
What is NARRATOLOGY?
100
Course for which the famous 1906 to 1911 lecture notes that form the basis of Structuralism were written.
What is Course in General Linguistics?
100
Negotiations with other readers and other texts.
What is intertextuality?
100
Claims that language mirrors the structure of the world it imitates and therefore has no structure of its own.
What is the mimetic theory of language?
100
According to Reader Oriented critics, cause readers to fills in parts of the story with their own imagination and expectations.
What are gaps?
200
I.A. Richards and Louise Rosenblatt were two theorists associated with this theory.
What is Reader Oriented theory?
200
A linguistic term to designate the basic units or building blocks of language, such as phonemes, morphemes, words, and so on.
What is an eme?
200
The revolutionary linguist who presented a new theory on the connection between words and concepts
Who is Saussure?
200
“Declaring both isolated text and author to be of little importance,” structuralism tries to __________ literature, taking away “its magical powers or so-called hidden meanings that can only be discovered by a small, elite group of highly trained specialists”
What is “demystify” ?
200
Reading that is focused on “carrying away” newly gained information from the text
What is efferent reading?
300
This structural pattern finds its meaning through opposition.
What is a mytheme?
300
In reader-oriented criticism Reader + Text = ________
What is meaning?
300
This form of literary criticism claims that meaning is ascertained by the conjunction of the reader and the text
What is reader oriented criticism?
300
"how the various lexical and grammatical morphemes combine to form words"
What is a MORPHOLOGY?
300
The smallest meaningful (significant) sound in a language.
What is phoneme?
400
Stanley Fish's term for "a group of readers who share the same interpretive strategies."
What is interpretive community?
400
Themes that transcend culture and time, speaking directly to the minds and hearts of all people.
What are mythemes?
400
"...the lens through which we see the world."
What is identity theme?
400
The signifier and the signified make up the two parts of this concept
What is sign?
400
The person to whom the narrator is speaking.
Who is the narratee?
500
This branch of Reader Oriented Criticism claims “that readers shape and find their self-identities in the reading process”
What is “Subjective Criticism”?
500
Became dominant in the mid-1960s in the United States and Europe and blended elements from Saussure and Russian Formalism?
What is Fstructuralism?
500
They emphasize the system (langue) whereby texts relate to each other, not an examination of an isolated text (parole).
Who are structuralists?
500
Created the term "horizons of expectation" to point out how a text is evaluated form one historical period to another.
Who is Hans Robert Jauss?
500
The person who physically picks up the text and reads it.
Who is the actual reader?