Classical Western Literary Criticism – Quick Revision Guide with Major Critics, Key Facts, Dates & Important Terms

Classical Criticism: MCQ Revision Dashboard
Undergraduate Exam Prep

Classical Literary Criticism

Quick Revision Guide: Facts, Dates, & Key Terms

I. Historical Overview and Key Debates

Period Timeframe Context & Key Critics Key Debates & Critical Focus
Greek / Hellenistic Began 4th Century BCE
Context

Ends with Battle of Actium (30 BCE).

Key Critics
Plato Aristotle
  • Mimesis: Imitation / Representation.
  • The connection between Beauty, Truth, and Goodness.
  • Concept of Organic Unity (Art as a living whole).
Roman Began after Battle of Actium (30 BCE)
Context

Flourished under rulers like Augustus.

Key Critics
Horace Longinus Quintilian
  • Function: “To teach and to please” (Utile et dulce).
  • Transmitting moral values and wisdom.
  • Focus on practical instruction and moral instruction of the audience.

2. Plato (c. 427–347 BCE)

Athenian

Major Dialogues

  • Ion Poetic Inspiration
  • The Republic Ideal State / Banishment
  • Phaedrus Rhetoric & Soul
  • Symposium Nature of Love
*Innovator of Dialogues (35 total) & Dialectic forms.

The Challenge to Poetry

Plato challenged the authority of poets using critical concepts such as imitation (Mimesis). He sought a cure for the ills of society in Philosophy, not Politics.

Paradox

“Of all the philosophers, I have esteemed him most worthy of reverence… since of all the philosophers he is the most poetical.”

— Sir Philip Sidney

The Theory of Mimesis (Imitation)

Based on the Theory of Forms/Ideas (found in The Republic, Book X).

  • Mimesis and Truth: Art (poetry) is imitation. Since material reality is already an imitation of Ideal Forms, poetry is an “imitation of an imitation,” making it twice removed from the truth or reality.
  • The Poet’s Role: Poets appeal primarily to the emotions or passions, rather than to reason.
1. The IDEA God/Abstract Truth
2. The OBJECT Material Reality
3. The ART Poetry (Twice Removed)

Types of Poetry

1. Dithyrambic Purely lyrical. The poet speaks in his own voice.
2. Mimetic Imitative (Drama). The poet speaks through characters (Impersonation).
3. Mixed Epic (Homer). Uses both narration and dialogue.

Why Banish the Poets? (The 3 Grounds)

Intellectual

Art is an illusion/lie. It offers no knowledge. It appeals to the inferior part of the soul, not Reason.

Moral & Social

Poetry undermines reason and promotes socially undesirable actions. He linked the Ideal of Beauty directly with Truth and Goodness, arguing that art must embody these virtues.

Emotional

“Feeds and waters the passions.” It encourages hysterical weeping/laughing instead of stoic control.

Allegory of the Cave (Republic, Book VII)

A metaphor for education and enlightenment. Prisoners in a cave see shadows on a wall and think they are real.

  • Shadows: The world of appearances (Sensory world).
  • Sun: The Truth / The Good (Philosophy).

View in ‘Ion’ (Divine Inspiration)

Socrates argues poets do not write by skill (Art) but by Divine Possession.

“The poet is a light and winged thing, and holy… poets are nothing but the interpreters of gods.”

3. Aristotle (c. 384–322 BCE)

The Lyceum

Profile

  • Born: Stagira, Macedonia.
  • Role: Tutor to Alexander the Great.
  • School: The Lyceum (Peripatetic).
  • Works: Poetics (26 Chaps), Rhetoric (3 Books).

The Defense of Poetry

Aristotle refutes Plato’s theories, providing a framework for critical analysis.

Mimesis (Representation)

Not mere imitation but re-creation. Poetry’s value is inherent, not dependent on its moral or political status.

Organic Unity

The principle that a literary work must be a complete, well-structured whole.

MCQ “Poetry is more philosophical and of graver import than history, for poetry speaks of universals (what might happen), history of particulars (what happened).”

Structure of The Poetics (26 Chapters)

Ch 1-5 Intro & Classification
Ch 6-19 TRAGEDY
Ch 20-22 Diction & Style
Ch 23 Narrative Poetry
Ch 24-26 Epic vs Tragedy

Elements of Tragedy (As Defined in Poetics)

Definition of Tragedy (Chapter 6)

“Tragedy is an imitation of a serious action of a certain magnitude, using language with pleasurable accessories… through pity and fear effecting the proper Catharsis (purification/purgation) of these emotions.”

Catharsis Goal: This emotional cleansing aims to achieve balance in the individual’s emotional life.

The 6 Constituent Parts (Ranked in order of importance)

  1. Plot (Mythos) – The “Soul” of Tragedy. Organization of incidents.
  2. Character (Ethos)
  3. Thought (Dianoia)
  4. Diction (Lexis)
  5. Melody (Melopoiia)
  6. Spectacle (Opsis) – Least important. Power resides in plot, not visual display.

Epic vs Tragedy

  • Aristotle prefers Tragedy because it has all elements of Epic + Music & Spectacle.
  • Unity of Action: Tragedy is more concentrated (one revolution of sun) vs Epic (no time limit).

Complex Plot Mechanics

A complex plot is superior to a simple plot.

Peripeteia
Reversal of Fortune. Action veers round to its opposite.
Anagnorisis
Recognition/Discovery. Change from ignorance to knowledge.
“A likely impossibility is always preferable to an unconvincing possibility.” (Probable Impossibilities)

The Ideal Tragic Hero

  • Status: Highly renowned & prosperous.
  • Character: Neither a saint nor a villain. An “intermediate” man.
  • The Fall: Caused by Hamartia (Error in Judgment), not vice.

4. Horace (c. 65–8 BCE)

Roman / Augustan Age

Note: Roman criticism focused heavily on practical instruction and the moral instruction of the audience.

Profile & Context

  • Work: Ars Poetica (The Art of Poetry).
  • Content: Practical guidance on composition, diction, and revision.
  • Form: Verse Letter (Epistolary).
  • Translator: Ben Jonson (1640).
Note: The title “Ars Poetica” was given by Quintilian, not Horace.

The Structure of Ars Poetica

Divided into three well-marked divisions:

1. Poesis Subject Matter
2. Poema Form / Structure
3. Poeta The Poet (Art vs Nature)

Core Principles

  • Utile et Dulce
    “To teach and to please.” Poetry should transmit moral values and wisdom.
  • Ut Pictura Poesis
    “As is painting, so is poetry.” (Visual nature of art).
  • In Medias Res
    Start “in the middle of things”. Do not start Ab Ovo (from the egg).

Advice to the Poet

The 9-Year Rule

“Keep your parchment for nine years.” Necessity of revision and careful writing.

Style & Balance

Stressed moderation and balance. Innate Talent (Nature) and Training (Art) are both necessary.

Rules for Drama

  • The 5-Act Rule: A play must have exactly 5 acts.
  • 3 Actor Rule: No more than 3 speaking characters on stage at once.
  • The Chorus: Should be regarded as one of the actors (participate in action).
  • Decorum: Consistency and appropriateness. A King must speak like a King; an old man like an old man.
  • No On-Stage Violence: Events like Medea killing her children must be reported, not shown.
  • Meter: Use iambic pentameter.

5. Longinus (1st Century CE)

Greek Rhetorician

Profile & Context

  • Work: Peri Hupsous (On the Sublime).
  • Focus: Qualities that elevate literature and give it enduring value.
  • Addressed To: His Roman friend, Terentianus.
  • Key Title: Called the “First Romantic Critic” (by Scott-James) and “First Comparative Critic” (by Abercrombie).

Defining the Sublime

“Sublimity is a certain loftiness and excellence in language… striking the reader with irresistible force.”
  • The Effect: Produces Transport (Ekstasis) / Elevation or Grandeur.
  • The Test: The effect is recognizable immediately and cannot be resisted. “Pleases all, and pleases always.”
  • The Method: It strikes like a flashing thunderbolt.

The 5 Principal Sources of Sublimity

Nature (Innate)

*Grandeur of thought and inspired passion are the two most influential sources.

  1. Grandeur of Thought The power of conceiving great thoughts (innate).
  2. Strong and Inspired Passion Vehement emotion.
Art (Technique)
  1. Appropriate Figures of Speech Use of figures.
  2. Noble Diction Choice of words and metaphors.
  3. Dignified Composition Harmonious arrangement.

“Art is perfect when it seems to be nature, and nature hits the mark when she contains art hidden within her.”

Hindrances (False Sublime)

  • Tumidity (Bombast): Swelling language for small thoughts.
  • Puerility: Childish, pedantic conceit.
  • Frigidity: Coldness, lack of genuine passion.
  • Parenthyrsus: Cheap, empty display of passion where none is needed.

Critical Stance

  • Genius vs. Mediocrity: Longinus prefers a “Faulty Homer” (Genius with slips) to a “Faultless Apollonius” (Flawless mediocrity).
  • Metaphor Rule: Unlike Aristotle (limit 2), Longinus says you can use any number of metaphors if passion demands it.
  • Sappho: Quotes her “Ode to Jealousy” as a prime example of the Sublime.

6. Dante Alighieri

1265 – 1321 Italian

Profile & Works

  • Major Work: De Vulgari Eloquentia (On Vernacular Eloquence).
  • Date: Written ~1304 (unfinished). Published 1529 (Trissino translation).
  • Legacy: “Naturalized” the Grand Style in Italian (just as Milton did for English).
  • Goal: Plea for writing in the Vernacular (Native Tongue) over Latin.

The “Illustrious Vernacular”

Dante sought a native language that lacked none of the grandeur of Classical Latin. This “Illustrious Vernacular” must be:

Illustrious (Shining)
Cardinal (Central)
Courtly
Curial (Lawful)

Requirements for the Illustrious Vernacular

1. Vocabulary

Avoid “Rustic” words. Admit only “Urban” words.

  • Combed: Smooth, elegant words.
  • Glossy: Polished, sophisticated.
  • Shaggy/Rumpled: Harsh, rustic sounds.

2. Construction

Use the “Highest Construction” (complex sentence structure) to mimic the gravity of Latin.

The style must be elevated, not colloquial.

3. Dignified Subjects

Only 3 themes are worthy of the Grand Style:

  • Salus Safety / Arms / Patriotism
  • Venus Love
  • Virtus Virtue / God / Philosophy
Related Concept

“Visit the ancients and strip them of their wealth.” — Vida (Italian Critic, 1527)

Compiled from “Classical Literary Criticism” Notes

For Educational Use Only

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