This has actually been one of my favorite topics of discussion in regards to reading for a long time. I really love seeing how different people can read the exact same thing and understand something totally different. I also love trying to figure out what the "true" meaning of text is, or weather the author even meant for there to be any specific meaning.
There is a line early in this chapter that I disagree with. Adena Rosmarin says that a "literary work can be likened to an incomplete work of sculpture", and that to really understand it you have to be able to visualise the big picture of the work in your head. But I don't think that's true. When I read something I don't usually visualise the entire, finished work as I am reading. Rarely do I ever even "analyze" while I'm in the process of reading. That comes after. In my opinion, if a work really is like a sculpture, then it's more like the kind of sculpture that kindergarteners make, where you just kind of go with it and let it form into whatever it's going to be and then decide what it all means in the end. I think if you try to understand what you're reading from the very beginning, you might accidentally end up inserting your own meaning or trying to force whatever you initially thought to fit into the work.
There is another section which stood out to me, which was that "reading is a 'rule-goverened transformative activity' in which the readers actively transform the text by paraphrasing and interpreting it" To me this goes right back into the idea that one reader can interpret a work much differently than another, depending what a reader decides to give importance to. Take this sentence:
"The homeless man trudged down the road slowly, looking off into the deep blue water of the lake that ran parallel to the street"
Some readers may focus on the colors and physical imagry of the sentence more than anything. Their first thought may be that the lake's deep blue color is representative of the man's sadness, and that's why he's walking slowly. Or that the lake being parallel to the road is symbolic of the man's long and seemingly never ending journey. Others might focus first on the man, the human element of the story. They might wonder why he is homeless, or feel bad for him, or feel disgusted with him. If you asked all these people what the sentence was about, one might say "It's about a poor, unfortunate man", another might say 'it's about sadness", another might say, "it's about the difficulty of human life", another might say,"it's a cautionary tale about working hard so you don't end up like this guy" etc. Just a single sentence can have so many different meanings just depending on which word you focus on, so an entire book or literary work can have a much bigger and even more different, or "off-the-wall" meaning, as the Reader-Response Critisism puts it.
Marisela, I agree with your whole blog and I believe what Adena Rosmarin is saying that a nature of books could represent the lacking of a sculpture. This sculpture could relate to a character, scene, theme or plot in a literary work, critically. Sometimes you have to think outside the box of what message is being relayed for you to understand an author perspective. I definitely agree with what your saying and why. This is another reason why people read differently.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with and enjoyed your entire post. I really love the topic of different meanings and interpretations depending on who's reading & I love that it keeps getting brought back up. I know we already discussed this in class, but with basically all of my lit teachers we were always told that there was one true meaning. Which truly sucked, so it's still great to hear even while I'm in college that my interpretation is not wrong just because it is different from others.
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