Definition of Critical Essay
Contrary to the literal name of “critical,” this type of
essay is not only an interpretation, but also an evaluation of a literary piece. It is written for a specific
audience,
who are academically mature enough to understand the points raised in
such essays. A literary essay could revolve around major motifs, themes,
literary devices and terms, directions, meanings, and above all – structure of a literary piece.
Evolution of the Critical Essay
Critical
essays in English started with Samuel Johnson. He kept the critical
essays limited to his personal opinion, comprising praise, admiration,
and censure of the merits and demerits of literary pieces discussed in
them. It was, however, Matthew Arnold, who laid down the canons of
literary critical essays. He claimed that critical essays should be
interpretative, and that there should not be any
bias or sympathy in criticism.
Examples of Critical Essay in Literature
Example #1: Jack and Gill: A Mock Criticism (by Joseph Dennie)
“The
personages being now seen, their situation is next to be discovered. Of
this we are immediately informed in the subsequent line, when we are
told,
Jack and Gill
Went up a hill.
Here the imagery
is distinct, yet the description concise. We instantly figure to
ourselves the two persons traveling up an ascent, which we may
accommodate to our own ideas of declivity, barrenness, rockiness,
sandiness, etc. all which, as they exercise the imagination, are
beauties of a high order. The reader will pardon my presumption, if I
here attempt to broach a new principle which no critic, with whom I am
acquainted, has ever mentioned. It is this, that poetic beauties may be
divided into negative and positive, the former consisting of mere
absence of fault, the latter in the presence of excellence; the first of
an inferior order, but requiring considerable critical acumen to
discover them, the latter of a higher rank, but obvious to the meanest
capacity.”
This is an excerpt from the critical essay
of Joseph Dennie. It is an interpretative type of essay in which Dennie
has interpreted the structure and content of
Jack and Jill.
Example #2: On the Knocking at the Gate in Macbeth (by Thomas De Quincey)
“But to return from this digression,
my understanding could furnish no reason why the knocking at the gate
in Macbeth should produce any effect, direct or reflected. In fact, my
understanding said positively that it could not produce any effect. But I
knew better; I felt that it did; and I waited and clung to the problem
until further knowledge should enable me to solve it. At length, in
1812, Mr. Williams made his debut on the stage of Ratcliffe Highway, and
executed those unparalleled murders which have procured for him such a
brilliant and undying reputation. On which murders, by the way, I must
observe, that in one respect they have had an ill effect, by making the
connoisseur in murder very fastidious in his taste, and dissatisfied by
anything that has been since done in that line.”
This is an excerpt from Thomas De Quincey about his criticism of Macbeth, a
play by
William Shakespeare. This essay sheds light on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth and their thinking. This is an interpretative type of essay.
Example #3: A Sample Critical Essay on Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises (by Richard Nordquist)
“To
keep Jake Barnes drunk, fed, clean, mobile, and distracted in The Sun
Also Rises, Ernest Hemingway employs a large retinue of minor
functionaries: maids, cab drivers, bartenders, porters, tailors,
bootblacks, barbers, policemen, and one village idiot. But of all the
retainers seen working quietly in the background of the novel,
the most familiar figure by far is the waiter. In cafés from Paris to
Madrid, from one sunrise to the next, over two dozen waiters deliver
drinks and relay messages to Barnes and his compatriots. As frequently
in attendance and as indistinguishable from one another as they are,
these various waiters seem to merge into a single emblematic figure as
the novel progresses. A detached observer of human vanity, this figure
does more than serve food and drink: he serves to illuminate the character of Jake Barnes.”
This is an excerpt from an essay written about Hemingway’s
The Sun Also Rises. This paragraph mentions all the characters of the novel in an interpretative way. It also highlights the major
motif of the essay.
Functions of a Critical Essay
A
critical essay intends to convey specific meanings of a literary text
to specific audiences. These specific audiences are knowledgeable
people. They not only learn the merits and demerits of the literary
texts, but also learn different shades and nuances of meanings. The
major function of a literary essay is to convince people to read a
literary text for reasons described.
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