Abstract
Before reinventing literary theory for the twenty-first century, we should consider what theory might do in principle. Both the functions of theory and its targets in literary study are often understood too narrowly. This chapter isolates three broad functions for theorization: (1) description and explanation, both general (e.g., in accounts of genre) and particular (e.g., in methods for interpreting individual works); (2) ethical-political or esthetic evaluation; and (3) production of practical effects. From here, the chapter takes up the target orientations of literary study, organizing them into literature-oriented study (e.g., understanding poems) and world-oriented study (e.g., understanding emotions). These broadened conceptions of the functions of theory and the orientations of literary study open up potentially valuable research programs beyond the theoretical practices of recent decades.
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Hogan, P.C. (2018). The Scope of Literary Theory. In: Pireddu, N. (eds) Reframing Critical, Literary, and Cultural Theories. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-89990-9_4
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