Extrinsic genre

A reader's or critic's conception of a work's genre that differs from the author's, sometimes referred to as the "wrong" genre, as it is not true to the author's original intentions (Fowler, 1971).

Reference: 

Fowler, A. (1971). The life and death of literary forms. New Literary History 2(2): 199-216. 

Example: 

Although Henry Fielding classified his book Joseph Andrews as "comic epic poem prose," critics referred to it as other genres in their reviews. In Fowler's (1971) view, the critics' interpretations (being different than the author's intentions) are the extrinsic genres.

Original Use: 

Hirsch, E. D. (1967). Validity in interpretation. New Haven: Yale UP. 

Contributed by: 

Emerging Genres class, N.C. State University, Spring 2010

当前无以此术语归类的内容。

订阅 RSS - Extrinsic genre
错误 | Genre Across Borders (GXB)

错误

网站遇到了不可预知的错误。请稍后再试。