Introduction
to Formalism,
Formalism in Russian Environment
Russian Formalists considered literature
to be a special use of language. As such it was amenable to analysis in
and of itself. Peter Steiner considers Russian Formalism to fall into three
periods:
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the machanical view of language;
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the organic view - literature as
organism of inter-related parts; and
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the the systemic view - literature
as a system, or organising principle.
Formalism began near the turn of
the Century, emerging in the OPOYAZ group (Society for Poetic Language)
as a break with the late romantic tradition of symbolism in literature
and Futurism and a number of related movements in the visual arts.
The movement sought a non-prescriptive
criticism that was part of a more general move towards making literature
more accessable to the masses. Victor Shklovsky introduced the idea of
'making strange' in order to derail passive and uncritical reception of
texts.
Shklovsky considered the work
of art to be the sum of the formal devices of which it is comprised, thus
abolishing the firm distinction between form and content. Later moves to
orient criticism towards structure as opposed to form avoided the suggestion
of form being something exterior to content.
Under this rubric, form
becomes merely the organisation of pre-aesthetic materials. Thus Shklovsky
differentiated between fabula (the fable) and syuzhet (plot) in terms of
the structuring of what is said. Yurii Tynyanov emphasised the binary methodology
favoured by the earlier formalists. Words, for Tynyanov were not essentially
'poetic' or 'prosaic' but rather were coloured by the formal textual context
in which they were positioned.
Shklovsky, Tynyanov, Eikhenbaum
and Tomashevsky considered the textual work in holistic terms as a complex
unity of component parts. The parts were analysed in relation to each other.
Those that stood out from the others were considered foregrounded. By establishing
a 'scientific' critical practice, with the articulation of structural 'laws'
then specific fields of literature could be related to other fields.
In 1928 Tynyanov, with
Roman Jakobson published the Theses on Language. These formed the
basis for the development of structuralism. These were:
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Literary science had to have a firm
theoretical basis and an accurate terminology.
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The structural laws of a specific
field of literature had to be established before it was related to other
fields.
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The evolution of literature must
be studied as a system. All evidence, whether literary or non-literary
must be analysed functionally.
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The distinction between synchrony
and diachrony was useful for the study of literature as for language, uncovering
systems at each separate stage of development. But the history of systems
is also a system; each synchronic system has its own past and future as
part of its structure. Therefore the distinction should not be preserved
beyond its usefulness.
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A synchronic system is not a mere
agglomerate of contemporaneous phenomena catalogued. 'Systems' means hierarchical
organisation.
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The distinction between langue and
parole, taken from linguistics, deserves to be developed for literature
in order to reveal the principles underlying the relationship between the
individual utterance and a prevailing complex of norms.
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The analysis of the structural laws
of literature should lead to the setting up of a limited number of structural
types and evolutionary laws governing those types.
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The discovery of the 'immananet
laws' of a genre allows one to describe an evolutionary step, but not to
explain why this step has been taken by literature and not another. Here
the literary must be related to the relevant non-literary facts to find
further laws, a 'system of systems'. But still the immanent laws of the
individual work had to be enunciated first.
Vladimir Propp was influenced by
the Formalists, and his work The Morphology of the Russian Folk Tale
provided one of the defining studies of genre, and laid the foundations
for French Structuralism, influencing particularly the work of Roland Barthes.
Another contemporary figure,
Mikhail Bakhtin, was also influenced by if not directly linked with the
Russian Formalists. His contributions to the notion of dialogism and the
notion of voice in literary discourse emerged contemporaneously with considerations
of sound and rhythmic elements in Formalist analyses. Russian Formalism
contributed a number of things to literary theory, including:
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placing the study of the actual
work at the centre of literary scholarship, rather than looking for authorial
biographical links or sociolgical influences, which they considered as
peripheral to the text.
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They problematised the idea of 'literariness',
and usefully addressed the 'form' versus 'content' issue.
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They viewed literary history and
the eveolution of literary genres as as an internal dynamic process.
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They contributed a wealth of analytical
techniques to stylistic analysis, including sound patterns, metres and
verse forms.
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They provided analytical techniques
for characterising a range of discursive styles and different modes of
story-telling.
Structural Formalism continued for
some time into the 1930s in the Prague Linguistic Circle. Some of this
group, including Roman Jakobson migrated to the US with the emergence of
Nazism. This group went on to influence the development of New Criticism
in the 1940s and 1950s.
In other directions, the
Bakhtin School combined elements of Formalism with Marxism. It was formalist
insofar as it was concerned with the linguistic structure of literary texts,
but was marxist in its comitment to the view that language could not be
separated from ideology. At the same time it resisted the purely marxist
turn insofar as it resisted the view that langauge arose as a reflex of
a material socio-economic substructure.
© Jerry Everard