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≡ Literary Systems ≡

 
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Forms in Literary Systems

If a literary system is the environment in which a piece of text comes into being, then literary forms are the building blocks of that environment. These forms are idiomatic ways of writing, authorial tricks that have built up over the years and codified themselves into common practice, tools with which to make meaning. Taken in aggregate, they form a system of rhetoric, a literary system.

An example: In mathematics there is a method of proof called reductio ad absurdum, by which a mathematician demonstrates the impossibility of some hypothesis by proving that if it were true, then a logical impossibility (the absurd) would also be true, and therefore it is false. Now, the mathematician does not have to explain this endeavor every time she attempts it, by merely mentioning the reductio her audience will understand what she's trying to do. This method of framing the proof is an example of a literary form that adds expressive power to the system of mathematics. There are many others.

As with all abstractions, you gain in expressiveness by using a literary form, but lose in detail. The reductio encompasses a wide array of proofs, but is not specific to the explanation of any particular one, over others. In computer programming, the expressive power of these forms is made literal. When a programmer uses a so-called "high level" computer language, she can employ a whole horde of algorithms and data structures with a single instruction, but knows very little about what the machine is up to. With novels, as an author employs more expressive literary forms, she can assume less and less about the exact thought processes that will eventually take place. A powerful word at the end of a novel can set a host of thoughts, repercussions and emotions through the mind of the reader. Instead of writing out the details explicitly, the form shapes the meaning.

The forms can, of course, be used in combination. When you come to the end of a book, having devoured it, feeling like there was not a wasted word, you've experienced the epiphenomena that manifests itself as a result of the interactions of literary forms.


 
I don't mean to imply that forms are the only factors that influence the texts of different literary systems. Cultural factors, technological advances and limitations all come into play as well.

With a printed book, for example, we are in no way able to verify the existence of our audience. Is anyone reading this right now? What do they think of it? It's impossible to know. Writing for the web changes that limitation by introducing the potential for two-way communication into the system. The desire for such feedback is strong: one of the first extra-print features that websites offered was the "hit counter" that would leave a tiny, digital footprint for each reader of your page. This is an example of a technological feature that's not really a kind of literary form, but may very well change the way the text is written.