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Critical
Issues:
Limits of Identification: The Personal, Pleasurable, and Critical
in Reader Response
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| Cynthia
Lewis University of Iowa |
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In
this article, I argue that the most common use of reader-response
theory in the classroom is misguided in its emphasis on personal response
and identification. After reconsidering the meaning of the “aesthetic
stance” as defined in the work of Louise Rosenblatt, I discuss the
social and political nature of readers, texts, and contexts. I include
two examples of teachers talking about a work of children’s literature
to illustrate that when a text is about characters whose cultures
and life worlds are very different from the reader’s, disrupting the
reader’s inclination to identify with the text can heighten the reader’s
self consciousness and text consciousness. This stance should not
be viewed as less aesthetic than a more direct or immediate relationship
between reader and text. Finally, I argue for a broader view of what
aesthetic reading can mean, one that addresses the social and political
dimensions of texts and invites students to take pleasure in both
the personal and the critical. |
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JLR
v.
32 no. 2
2000
pp. 253–266 |
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