The Function of Criticism
The Function of Criticism
The Function of Criticism
Eliots essay Tradition and Individual Talent was published a few years earlier in 1919. Middleton Murray, a famous romantic, challenged the opinions of Eliot in his essay Romanticism and the Tradition. The present essay is Eliots reply to Murray. The first part gives in brief the opinions expressed by Eliot in the essay Tradition and Individual Talent; in the second part, he gives a resume of the views of Middleton Murray; in the third part, these views of Murray are briefly dismissed, and in the concluding fourth part, the poet examines the different aspects of the nature and function of criticism. Eliots Dynamic Conception of Tradition Eliot begins the essay by referring to his own views he had expressed in his earlier essay, Tradition and Individual Talent, because they are relevant to the present essay. In the earlier essay, he had pointed out that there is an intimate relation between the present and the past in the world of literature. The entire literature of Europe from Homer down to the present day forms a single literary tradition, and it is in relation to this tradition that individual writers and individual works of art have their significance. This is so because the past is not dead, but lives on in the present. The past is altered by the present as much as the present is directed by the past. Past works of literature form an ideal order, but this ideal order is disturbed if ever so slightly, when a really new work of art appears. There is a readjustment of values, resulting in conformity between the old and the new. Literary tradition is constantly changing and growing dynamically from age to age. Literary Tradition: The Value of Conformity The literary tradition is the outside authority to which an artist in the present must owe allegiance. He must constantly surrender and sacrifice himself in order to have meaning and significance. The true artists of any time form an ideal community, and artist in the present must achieve a sense of his community. He must realise that artists of all times are united together by a common cause and a common inheritance. While a second rate artist assets his individuality because his distinction lies in the difference and not in similarity with others, the true artist tries to conform. He alone can afford to collaborate, to exchange, to contribute. Definition of Criticism and Its Ends Eliots views on criticism derive from his views on art and tradition as given above. He defines criticism as, the commentation and exposition of works of art by means of written words. Criticism can never be an autotelic activity, because criticism is always about something. Art, as critics like Matthew Arnold point out, may have some other ends, e.g., moral, religious, cultural, but art need not be aware of these ends, rather it performs its function better by being indifferent to such ends. But criticism always has one and only one definite end, and that end is, elucidation of works of art and the correction of taste. In his essay The Frontiers of Criticism, he further explains the aim of criticism as, the promotion of understanding and enjoyment of literature. The Need of Co-operation and Conformity Since the end of criticism is clear and well defined, it should be easy to determine whether a critic has performed his function well or not. However, this is not such an easy task. The difficulty arises from the fact that critics, instead of trying to discipline their personal prejudices and whims and composing their differences with as many of their fellow critics as possible and co-operating in the common pursuit of true judgment, express extreme views and vehemently assert their individually, i.e. the ways in which they differ from others. This is so because they owe their livelihood to such differences and oddities. The result is criticism has become like a Sunday Park full of orators competing with each other to attract as large audience as possible. Such critics are a worthless lot of no value and significance. However, there are certain other critics who are useful, and it is on the basis of their works, that Eliot establishes the aims and methods of criticism which should be followed by all. Murrays Views or the Classic and the Romantic In the second part of the essay, Eliot digresses into a consideration of Middleton Murrys views on classicism and Romanticism. While there are critics who hold that classicism and romanticism are the same thing, Murry takes a definite position, and makes a clear distinction between the two, and says that one cannot be a classic and a romantic at one and the same time. In this respect, Eliot praises Murry, but he does not agree with him when he makes the issue a national and racial issue, and says that the genius of the French is classic and that of the English is romantic. Murry further relates Catholicism in religion with classicism in literature, for both believe in tradition, in discipline, in obedience to an objective authority outside the individual. On the contrary, romanticism and Protestantism, and social liberalism, are related, for they have full faith in the inner voice, in the individual, and obey no outside authority. They care for no rules and traditions. Eliots Rejection of Murrys Views But Eliot does not agree with these views. In his opinion, the difference between classicism and romanticism is, the difference between the complete and the fragmentary, the adult and the immature, the orderly and the chaotic. To him the concept of the inner voice sounds remarkably like doing, What one likes. It is a sign of indiscipline leading to vanity, fear and lust. Neither does he agree with the view that the English as a nation are romantics and so humorous and non-conformists, while the French are naturally classical.
Ironic Treatment of Inner Voice In the third part of the essay, Eliot summarily dismisses the views of Murry. The tone is one of light ridicule. He contemptuously calls the inner voice, whiggery. For those who believe in the inner voice, criticism is of no value at all, because the function of criticism is to discover some common principles for achieving perfection in art. Those who believe in the inner voice do not want any principles. In other words, they do not care for perfection in art, which can result only through obedience to the laws of art, and to tradition which represents the accumulated wisdom and experience of ages. Criticism and the Creative Faculty In the fourth part, Eliot deals with the problem of criticism in all its manifold aspects. In the very beginning, he comments upon the terms critical and creative. He ridicules Matthew Arnold for having distinguished rather bluntly between the critical and the creative activity. He does not realise that criticism is of capital importance in the work of creation. As a matter of fact, the larger part of the labour of an author in composing his work is critical labour, the labour of sifting, combining constructing, expunging, correcting, testing. Eliot further expresses the view that the criticism employed by a writer on his own work is the most vital and the highest kind of criticism. Elsewhere, Eliot calls such criticism, workshop criticism. Its high worth and value cannot be denied, for a poet who knows from personal experience the mysteries of the creative process is in a better position to write about it than those who have no such knowledge. Eliot goes to the extent of saying that some creative writers are superior to others only because their critical faculty is superior. He ridicules those who decry the critical toil of the artist, and hold the view that the greater artist is an unconscious artist. He calls such concepts whiggery and pours his ridicule on such people. He commends those who, instead relying on the Inner voice, or inspiration, conform to tradition, and in this way try to make their works as free from defects as possible. Can There be Creative Criticism? It is a mistake to separate critical and creative activities. A large part of creation is in reality criticism. But critical writing cannot be creative. There can be no creative criticism. Creative criticism is neither criticism nor creation. This is so because there is a fundamental difference between creation and criticism. Creation, a work of art, is autotelic. It has no conscious aims and objectives. Criticism, on the other hand, is always about something, other than itself. In other words, it is not an autotelic activity, its aim being the commentation and elucidation of works of art. Hence it is that we cannot fuse creation with criticism as we can fuse criticism with creation. The critical activity finds its highest fulfilment when it is fused with creation, with the labour of the artist. The Qualifications of an Ideal Critic: A Highly Developed Sense of Fact Eliot next proceeds to consider the qualifications of a critic. The foremost quality which an ideal critic must have is a highly developed sense of fact. The sense of fact is a rare gift. It is not frequently met with, and it is very slow to develop. The value of a practitioners criticismsay that of a poet on his own art, workshop criticism as Eliot elsewhere calls itlies in the fact that he is dealing with facts which he understands, and so can also help us to understand them. Eliots own criticism is such workshop criticism, and Eliot is all praises for such critics and their criticism. There is a large part of criticism which seeks to interpret an author and his work. But most of such interpretation is no interpretation at all. It is mere fiction; the critic gives his views, his impression of the work, and so is false and misleading. Eliot has no use for such impressionistic criticism; it gives us no insight into the work under study. The true critic himself knows the facts about a work of artits conditions, its settings, its genesisand puts them before his readers in a simple and easy manner. Thus it is clear that by facts Eliot means the various technical aspects of a work of art. The Tools of the Critic: Comparison and Analysis Comparison and analysis are the chief tools of a critic. These are the tools of the critic, and he must use them with care and intelligence. Comparison and analysis can be possible only when the critic knows the facts about the works which are to be compared and analysed. He must know the facts about the work of arttechnical elements like its structure, content and themeand not waste his time in such irrelevant fact-hunting as the inquiry into the number of times giraffes are mentioned in the English novel. However, the method of comparison and analysis, even when used unjudiciously, is preferable to interpretation in the conventional sense. Warning Against Fact-hunting Facts, even facts of the lowest order, cannot corrupt taste, while impressionistic criticism, like that of Coleridge and Goethe, is always misleading. The function of criticism is to educate taste or, as Eliot puts it elsewhere, to promote enjoyment and understanding of literature. Now facts, however trivial, can never corrupt taste; they can only gratify taste. Critics like Goethe or Coleridge, who supply opinion or fancy, are the real corruptors. In the end, Eliot cautions us not to become slaves to facts and bother about such trivialities as the laundry bills of Shakespeare. Such fact-hunting is not criticism. Similarly, he warns us against the vicious taste for reading about works of art instead of reading the works themselves. Lemon squeezer and Impressionistic Criticism: Eliots Condemnation
Eliots emphasis on facts makes it clear that his critical stand is with such New Critics as F.R. Leavis and I.A. Richards. He commends textual criticism, but he is against the lemon-squeezer school of critics who try to squeeze every drop of meaning out of words. A critic should concentrate on the text, compare and analyse, but he should never stoop to trivialities or empty hair-splitting. A good critic is objective, his judgment is based on facts, he is guided by tradition, the accumulated wisdom of ages and not by his, inner voice. He does not indulge in mere expression of opinion or fancy. Eliot is against impressionistic criticism, but he does not expound any theories or lay down any rules and principles. Impressionistic criticism is erratic, while adherence to rigid theories hampers the critic and curtails his freedom Eliots Originality: Objective, Scientific Attitude The critic should be guided by facts and facts alone. He should approach the work of art with a free mind, unprejudiced by any theories or preconceived notions. Only then can he be completely objective and impersonal. It is in this way that criticism approximates to the position of science. It is only in this way that criticism becomes a co-operative activity, the critic of one age cooperates with critics of the previous ages in common pursuit of truth. Such truths are provisional, for truths of one age are likely to be modified and corrected by truths discovered by future ages. In this objective-scientific attitude Eliot is different from all other previous English critics. Herein lies his individuality and originality. He is like a scientist working with an open mind and co-operating with others, for the realisation of truth which he knows can only be tentative. Eliot begins his essay stating or repeating his views which he had already expressed in his essay Tradition and the Individual Talent. Eliot repeats that there is a close bond between the present and the past in the world of literature, as in the other fields of life. We cannot claim any superiority which is our own. In other words , we continue the work of the past. But it does not mean total dependence. Eliot calls the bond a kind of tradition. All literary works from the time of the ancient masters Homer to the present generation form a single tradition. A writers significance or importance is measured in relation to this tradition. By criticism Eliot means the analysis of literary works. Criticism can never be an autotelic [directed towards an end in itself] activity. This is because criticism is always about something. So that something is to be considered. The main aim of criticism is the clear explanation of literary texts and the correction of taste. But often critics try to differ from one another. This happens because of their prejudices and eccentricities. Eliot holds the view that critics should conform and co-operate in the common pursuit, of true excellence. The result of differences in reviews is that criticism has become like a Sunday park, full of orators competing with each other to attract more audience. Even in this troubled situation, there are some critics who are useful. It is on the basis of their works that Eliot intends to establish the aims and methods of criticism. In the second part of his essay on the Function of Criticism Eliot mentions Middleton Murrays views on Classicism and Romanticism. Murray makes a clear distinction between the two and states that one cannot be Romanticist as well as a Classicist at once. Eliot does not agree with this view of Murray. Murray seems to make it a national or a racial problem, suggesting that the genius of the French is classic and that of the English is romantic. Eliot does not agree with the view of Murray who says that the English as a nation are romantics, humourists and non-conformists. Eliot does not agree with Murray who says that the French are naturally classical. In the last part of the essay, Eliot discusses the problem of criticism in all its manifold aspects. He makes fun of Matthew Arnold who rather bluntly distinguished between the critical and the creative activities. Eliot blames Arnold for not considering that criticism is of great importance, in the process of creation itself. In Eliots view , an authors self-criticism is the best kind of criticism. It is the self-criticism of ones own composition. He says that some writers are better creative and superior to others, only because their critical faculty is superior. They are able to criticize their own compositions even at the time of composing them. The result is that they are corrected and refined. He does not agree with the view that the great artist is an unconscious artist. He argues that critical activities and creative activities cannot be separated. The most important qualification of a critic is that he must have a very highly developed sense of fact. Eliot agrees that it is a rare gift. Eliot does not think highly of interpreting an author. The critic must be able to give an insight into a text. He argues that impressionistic criticism is false and misleading. Eliot defines criticism as, "the commentation and exposition of works of art by means of written words ". Criticism always has one and only one definite end, and that end is, "elucidation of works of art and the correction of taste." In his essay, The Frontiers of Criticism, he further explains the aim of criticism as, "the promotion of understanding and enjoyment of literature." Since the end of criticism is clear and well-defined, it should be easy to determine whether a critic has performed his function well or not. However, this is not such an easy task. The difficulty arises from the fact that critics, instead of trying to discipline their personal prejudices and whims and composing their differences with as many of their fellow critic as possible and co-operating in the common pursuit of true judgment, express extreme views and vehemently assert their individuality, i.e. the ways in which they differ from others. This is so because they owe their livelihood to such differences and oddities.. Such critics are a worthless lot of no value and significance. However, there are certain other critics who are
useful, and it is on the basis of their works, that Eliot establishes the aims and methods of criticism which should be followed by all. Eliot deals with the problem of criticism in all its manifold aspects. In the very beginning, he comments upon the terms 'critical' and 'creative'. He ridicules Matthew Arnold for having distinguished rather bluntly between the 'critical' and the 'creative' activity. He does not realise that criticism is of capital importance in the work of creation. As a matter of fact, "the large part of the labour of an author in composing his work is critical labour; the labour of sifting, combining, constructing, expunging, correcting, testing". Eliot further expresses the view that the criticism employed by a writer on his own work is the most vital and the highest kind of criticism. Elsewhere, Eliot calls such criticism, 'workshop criticism.' Its high worth and value cannot be defined, for a poet who knows from personal experience the mysteries of the creative process is in a better position to write about it than those who have no such knowledge. Eliot goes to the extent of saying that some creative writers are superior to others only because their critical faculty is superior. He ridicules those who decry the critical toil of the artist, and hold the view that the greater artist is an unconscious artist. He commends those who, .stead of relaying on the 'Inner voice' or 'inspiration', conform to tradition, and in this way try to make their works as free from defects as possible. Conclusion:- According to Eliot, it is a mistake to separate critical and creative activities. A large part of creation is in reality criticism. But critical writing cannot be creative. There can be creative criticism. Creative criticism is neither criticism nor creation. This is so because there is a fundamental difference between creation and criticism. Creation of a work of art, has no conscious aims and other than itself. True criticism is a system of scientific enquiry in to the essential spirit of a work of art . The function of the critic is to see a work of art as it is, and to present before the reader what he sees in it. Thus criticism is 'a disinterested exercise of intelligence' bearing on a work of art. A good critic must aim at the clear 'elucidation of works of art and the correction of taste. 'Elucidation is needed because most of the readers are prone to 'confuse issues' implied in a work of art. Similarly, 'correction of taste' is needed because every critical effort must act 'as a kind of cog regulating the rate of change in literary taste'. With his attention fixed solely and steadfastly on the work before him, he has to dig deep into it for the law that can account for it fully. T.S. Eliot further says that the most important critic of a creative artist is the author himself. No author can produce a great literary work if he does not have an inherent critical faculty in himself. T.S. Eliot says, "I maintain even that the criticism employed by a trained and skilled writer on his own work is the most vital, the highest kind of criticism; and some creative writers are superior to others solely because their critical faculty is superior". Eliots views on the nature and function of criticism can be summed up thus: 1. The function of criticism is the elucidation of works of art and the correction of taste. A critic must place the facts of a work of art before his readers, point out the good in it, and thus promote enjoyment and understanding of literature. 2. To discover the nature of poetry and the process of poetic creation. 3. To preserve the living literary traditions and reveal the good in them. 4. To judge works of art by sound literary principles whose value has been tried and established. 5. To turn the attention of the reader from the poet to his poetry. 6. Comparison and analysis are the chief tools which the critic uses to perform his function. He must, therefore, know what to analyse and compare; sound scholarship is necessary for a critic. 7. A good critic must have a sense of fact, for opinion and fancy corrupt, but facts cannot corrupt. The critic must know all the facts about a work of art,and not merely about the artist,and place them before the readers. He must not judge on the basis of his personal feelings or emotions but on the basis of solid facts revealed by a close study of the work concerned. 8. In his essay on The Frontiers of Criticism, Eliot points out certain limits which, a critic must not cross. No doubt, a critic must have a knowledge of other subjects like history, sociology, philosophy and others, but he must take care that his criticism does not become a mere commentary on these subjects. Secondly, criticism must not be merely impressionistic; it must be based on sound facts. But this knowledge of facts, too, must not be carried too far. Exaggerated importance attached to scholarship vitiates criticism, as it does in the case of J.L. Lowes book The Road to Xanadu. Both Arnold and Coleridge are imperfect critics. The one is too impressionistic, and the other is too dry and intellectual. Eliot holds out Aristotle as an outstanding example of a perfect critic. 9. According to Eliot, the right type of criticism is, the workshop criticism, i.e. the criticism of a poet of his own poetry and that of others. But even this criticism has its own limitations and Eliot is fully conscious of them. 10. While Eliot stresses the close study of a poem for the purpose of elucidation and interpretation, he is against the, lemon-squeezer school of criticism, those who analyse a poem stanza by stanza and line by line, and extract, squeeze, tease, and press every drop of meaning out of it. A good critic must avoid extremes of this kind 11. According to Eliot, the qualifications of a perfect critic are: Sensitiveness, erudition, sense of fact, sense of history and generalising power.