Strucuturalism As A Method of Literary Criticism
Strucuturalism As A Method of Literary Criticism
Strucuturalism As A Method of Literary Criticism
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ISAIAH SMITHSON
Structuralismas a Method of
Literary Criticism
145
146 COLLEGEENGLISH
and, therefore, the structure itself, can undergo change, but that the transformed
structure will still be recognizable as the same one, or at least of the same class.
Piaget is dealing primarily with the sort of structure one would encounter in
the sciences, and Levi-Strauss with the type one finds in anthropology, but it
is not too difficult to transfer their ideas into the realm of literature. One can
see, for example, that a whole novel or poem would be a system in the sense
defined above. One can also see that smaller units within the total work would
also qualify as systems: the various male/female relationships in Lawrence's
Women in Love (Birkin and Ursula, Birkin and Hermione, Gerald and Gudrun,
and Gudrun and Loerke) are obvious examples of separate variations of one
recognizable structure. The transformations are more complex, but, again using
Women in Love as an example, it is evident that as each of the male/female
relationships is recognizable as being of the same structure and yet as different
from one another, the various elements of these structures must be being seen
as transformations of one another. And in comparing these couples, these struc-
tures, one is isolating the transformations undergone. Of course, the sort of
structure found in Women in Love is not the only kind encountered in literature.
One could, for example, identify Honor Klein of Iris Murdoch's A Severed Head
as being of the structure of the Terrible Mother. One could then analyze the
transformed elements that emerge as one compares the appearance of the Terrible
Mother in myth with that of Honor Klein in the novel. This would involve an
operation quite different from that of comparing the male/female structures
of Women in Love. Instead of dealing only with structures within a work of
art, one would be dealing with a structure within the work and another external
to it. As these two examples suggest, the possible ways in which structures
occur in literature are varied and numerous, but that they do occur in literature
in the sense defined by Piaget is clear.
Given, then, this definition of "structure," it is now possible to go on to
discuss structuralism itself, or at least the basic principles of structuralism. The
first of these, the emphasis on relations, arises out of the above-given definition.
Lane says, "Probably the most distinctive feature of the structuralist method
is the emphasis it gives to wholes, to totalities. . . . a new importance has been
given to the logical priority of the whole over its parts."3 Now at first glance
Lane's statement of the principle seems accurate. Yet Piaget reminds us that
structuralism's reaction to "atomism" is not simply a reversal; it is not just a
matter of emphasizing wholes instead of parts. Rather, he says, "it is neither
the elements nor a whole . . . , but the relations among elements that count. In
other words, the logical procedures or natural processes by which the whole is
formed are primary, not the whole . .. or the elements" (Piaget, pp. 8-9).
Lane's claim, then, is a slFght misstatement. But the main point is clear: as a
structure is a system, part;Icularrelations are going to exist among its elements.
And in so far as literary criticism can define these relations, i.e., the ways in
which elements interact and are dependent on one another, it can gain insight
into the literary work. If one can, for example, grasp the set of relations that
holds among several novels of a particular type (categories such as "Bildungs-
roman," first person narrative, and Naturalistic), if one can see the relations
that obtain among the several elements of a single novel, or if one can define
the relations existing between a mythic and a novelistic expression of the same
structure, or existing among the elements of that structure as it appears in the
novel alone, one will, sometimes simply by a process of comparative morphology,
perceive things imperceptible without the structuralist method. Whether one
is dealing with the "smallest" structure one can isolate, or with a series of
structures seen as variations of one structure or as elements of a larger structure,
an investigation into the relations that hold among the constituent units will
necessarily force "information" to emerge that is different from that which would
result from a concentration on the elements themselves or on the wholes which
they form.
Another principle that is essential to structuralism and pertinent to literary
criticism is the synchronic/diachronic distinction. Barthes comments, "watch
who uses ... synchronic and diachronic," for this is one of the discriminations
out of which "the structuralist vision is constituted."4 Structuralism as it investi-
gates the elements of a structure, the relations among them, and the process of
transformation which occurs within the structure, is not primarily concerned
with diachronic formation, the order of precedence among the elements. Instead,
its concern is with the synchronic, with, as Lane puts it, "relations across a
moment in time, rather than through time" (pp. 16-17). It is not that time is
ignored; it is just that it is not emphasized in the "structuralist vision" in the
way that it is in nonstructural methodologies. Now, a corollary of the synchronic
way of seeing is an absence of interest in casuality. Structuralism, because its
view is synchronic, does not seek a cause as an explanation of why and how two
structures can be said to be of the same class, yet different from one another.
Rather, it is interested in ":'laws of transformation' ": "the law-like regularities
that can be observed, or derived from observation, by which one particular
structural configuration changes into another" (Lane, p. 17). The question of
causality does not arise here.
The relevance of the synchronic/diachronic distinction to literary criticism
is easy to illustrate; the appropriateness of the so-called laws of transformation
is not. (Unquestionably, the concept of laws of transformation is more suitable
to the sciences than to literary criticism.) To view Women in Love as the
presentation of Birkin's spiritual development through time, the specific phases
in his development and their causes being considered essential, is to see the novel
diachronically. But to isolate the four main couples as the structural principle
of the novel is to view the work synchronously. Clearly, one's
understanding
of this novel, or of any work, will differ greatly according to whether one
approaches it diachronically or synchronously. Yet, even if one has approached
a work synchronously, and has determined the structuring systems, to go on
from there and define the rules that allow one structure to be transformed into
another is difficult. It might be that, in the case of Women in Love, one could
focus on the different characteristics of the Great Mother archetype expressed
by each of the females in the couples, and on the different qualities of the
mythological hero encountering the Great Mother embodied by each of the
males, and use these as the basis for deriving laws of transformation. That is,
one could define the principles inherent in each of the two archetypal figures
and in the archetype of the mythological encounter itself, and maintain that the
structures as they are expressed through the characters and situations of Women
in Love can be said to be transformations of one another and of the archetypes
only in so far as they embody some of, or variations of, the principles defined.
In effect, that each of the couples and their situations have certain elements
in common and in difference, and that both the similarities and differences be
essential elements of the Great Mother/hero-encounter archetype would form
the laws of transformation, the "law-like regularities." I do not suggest that this
is a wholly adequate solution to the problem, but it may at least indicate a
possible way in which one would proceed in order to determine the laws of
transformation of a given structure.
The third tenet, that the structures sought exist "below the surface," is less
difficult to deal with. L6vi-Strauss often warns that when one is seeking to
define the structures of a social activity, one must beware of "secondary
elaborations,"" that is, of the explanations of the social activities that might be
given by those participating in them. This caution, though it is directed at
structuralist anthropology, is relevant to structuralist literary criticism. Works
of literature are, of course, something other than mere "secondary elaborations,"
but it is still true that, although the only material one has for an understanding
of a work's structure is the work itself, the structure of the work will be
something other than that which is immediately evident on the "surface." Barthes
is useful on this point. As he explains his version of structuralism, the goal of
the "structuralist activity" is to construct a "simulacrum of the object," for
this "makes something appear which remained invisible, or if one prefers,
unintelligible . . ." (Barthes, p. 83). Structuralism effects this through a two-
phase activity. First, it submits the work to a "dissection" whereby the "frag-
ments" (equivalent to what have been termed "elements" above) are revealed.
(Barthes, p. 85). And then, through a process of "articulation," the "rules of
association" of these "units" are established (p. 86). This description of struc-
turalism in terms of dissection and articulation is helpfully suggestive. To dissect
a work of art in order to determine its structures is to delve "below the surface"
of the work. In other words, to see a work synchronously so as to isolate its
structuring principles and the elements that form the structures involves a going
structures
beyond that which is immediately manifest. And to articulate the
discovered, that is, to define these structures in terms of their elements as well
as of the relations among them, does, as Barthes suggests, "make something
appear which remained invisible." The "simulacrum" that is the result of the
structural analysis will be a description of structures that exists only at a great
"depth," and which cannot be uncovered without the application of the struc-
turalist method.
Almost all discussions of structuralism emphasize the method's universality;
structuralism is applicable to any area of investigation and is, therefore, useful
in any scholarly discipline. What this indicates, of course, is that structures are
universally present. And if structures are everywhere, there is at least the
possibility that there are necessary relations among these various structures,
regardless of the field of inquiry in which they happen to appear. This possibility,
the final defining principle to be discussed, is one of Levi-Strauss's main concerns,
and it is through his ideas that this issue is best developed. Levi-Strauss, like
many structuralists, takes structural linguistics as the model of the sort of
structuralism he uses in his own field. For as Levi-Strauss points out, "among
the social sciences . . ." structural linguistics is "the only one which can truly
claim to be a science."6 Yet it also has all the properties essential to a structural
methodology. That is, linguistics concentrates on the "unconscious infrastructure,"
focuses on "relations between terms," employs the "concept of system," and
"aims at discovering general laws" (p. 31). And, as L6vi-Strauss says, "when
an event of this importance takes place in one of the sciences of man, it is not
only permissible for, but required of, representatives of related disciplines
immediately to examine its consequences and its possible application to phenomena
of another order" (p. 31). Following his own advice, Levi-Strauss discovers
significant parallels between linguistic problems and kinship problems, his par-
ticular area of concern. He finds that both phonemes and kinship terms are
"elements of meaning," that both types of elements acquire their meaning "only
if they are integrated into systems," that in both spheres "the observable phenom-
ena result from the action of laws which are general but implicit," and that in
both cases the respective systems "are built by the mind on the level of uncon-
scious thought" (p. 32). Levi-Strauss's further discussion makes clear that the
differences between the two subjects are great, and that even the four listed
similarities are simplifications; nevertheless, his conclusion is that "Although
they belong to another order of realiy, kinship phenoma are of the same type
as linguistic phenomena" (p. 32).
The success that linguistic structuralism has had in attaining to the conditions
of a science, and the parallels L6vi-Strauss discovers between linguistic and
kinship phenomena, are not without meaning for literary criticism. Language,
as L6vi-Strauss points out, is a "social phenomenon," and one of its most
important characteristics is that "much of linguistic behavior lies on the level
of unconscious thought."' That is, the laws according to which humans learn
and use language are not consciously known. But since language can be studied
scientifically, its "systems of relations which are the products of unconscious
thought processes" can be derived and analyzed (p. 57). The question that
arises, then, is, "Is it possible to effect a similar reduction in the analysis of other
forms of social phenomena?" (p. 57)
ultimately defensible basis for evaluation, but that does not vindicate this
inadequacy in structuralism.
Aside from these failings-or, to be exact, this one failing-structuralist
criticism has important advantages. These are suggested in the definition given
in the previous paragraph, as well as in the paper as a whole. Yet a brief example
of an actual structuralist analysis will serve to illustrate them, and to clarify the
above-elaborated concepts. In Lawrence's The Rainbow, the principal structure
that underlies the novel is that of the various male/female conflicts. In its first
appearance it is but roughly sketched. The reader learns little of Alfred Brangwen
and his wife other than that the woman is "a thing to herself . . . separate and
indifferent,"" that the man is capable of "deep, tense fury" (p. 8) that injures
the woman, and that the two, nevertheless, generally get along well and achieve
deep satisfaction with one another, because "They were two very separate beings,
vitally connected, knowing nothing of each other, yet living in their separate
ways from one root" (p. 8). But the second appearance of this structure, the
courtship and married life of Tom and Lydia, is extensively developed. The
conflict between Lydia, who is self-absorbed, foreign, and ultimately inviolable,
and Tom, who, in turn, fears, rages against, and worships this "awful unknown"
(p. 90), is traced through various stages and several years. However, the struggle
between Tom and Lydia is finally less mutually fulfilling than is that between
Alfred and his wife. For though this battle of wills sometimes culminates by
temporarily creating a binding "spell" (p. 51) or a vital "connection" (p. 57)
between the two, and though Lydia achieves contentment, the cost for these
achievements is Tom's being, as Lawrence puts it, "reduced" (p. 99). The
third variation of the structure, the relationship of Will and Anna, is even
more thoroughly elaborated, and is shown to be even less mutually satisfying.
Though Will begins as a self-sufficient, confident young man interested in Christian
architecture and symbolism, and deeply moved by religious mystery, he becomes
a dependent and frustrated middle-aged man. For Anna, who is devoted to and
fulfilled by the "violent trance of motherhood" (p. 217), and who wishes to
acknowledge only the conscious self and intelligible experience, is obsessed
with destroying the vague and inarticulate passion that constitutes Will's being.
Only thus, by destroying Will, can "Anna Victrix" extend "the little matriarchy"
And
(p. 205) to include not only her many children, but also her husband.
the final transformation of the structure, the one the novel presents most fully,
exhibits much the same characteristics. Again, the couple, Ursula and Skrebensky,
is involved in a struggle for domination, though it is far more violent battle
than have been the preceding three. Again, the male is too weak to meet the
challenge-indeed, Skrebensky proves to be totally inept. And, again, reciprocal
fulfillment is denied the pair; in fact, in this variation of the structure, even the
female fails to gain satisfaction from the relationship.
Thus a synchronic analysis of The Rainbow shows it to be informed by four
variations of one structure, or, synonymously, by four similar structures. And the
11D. H. Lawrence, The Rainbow (New York: Viking Press, 1961), p. 7. All further quota-
tions of this novel will be from this edition and will be cited parenthetically.
Structuralismas a Methodof LiteraryCriticism 153
differences among these four versions, or structures, are explained largely by the
changes undergone by the above-discussed defining elements. That is, the above
description of the four structures indicates that, as one variation follows another
chronologically, the male becomes increasingly weaker; the female, conversely, be-
increasingly more dominant; and the relationship itself, because it depends on
the equivalent strength of the male's and female's wills for its success, becomes
increasingly less satisfying. Changes in these three constitutive elements, then,
account to a great extent for the transformations among the structures; changes
in these elements form, in part, the so-called laws of transformation pertinent to
these structures.
Yet there is one additional element which, though it occurs in and partially
constitutes only three of the four variations, also undergoes change and does,
therefore, contribute to the transformations of the structures. In each of the last
three expressions of the structure, there is an emphasis on the concern with
and/or attempts at self-realization manifested and/or made by one member of
each pair. And these concerns with and/or quests for self-fulfillmept form a
fourth constitutive element. With respect to Tom and Lydia, the focus is on
Tom. He is shown, at age twenty-four, as being stirred and inspired by the
seductive young woman and by the foreigner (her lover) who displays such
"exquisite graciousness" (p. 19). Tom's brief experience with them at the hotel
in Matlock makes him aware that there is "a life so different from what he
knew" (p. 19), that there is something beyond the "reality of Cossethay and
Ilkeston" (p. 21), and that there is stagnation and incompleteness in his present
way of being. Tom is shown a second time, at age twenty-eight, as experiencing
this same sense of there being a "far world" (p. 24) in which he does not
participate, and of his being only "fragmentary" and "incomplete" (p. 35); in
this instance it is the discovery and love of Lydia that so stimulates him. And
even when Tom is older, at age forty-five, he is depicted as still feeling that
something is "missing in his life" (p. 124), and that: "One was never right, never
decent, never master of oneself. . ... He was a man of forty-five. Forty-five!
In five more years fifty. Then sixty-then seventy-then it was finished.
My
God-and one still was so unestablished!" (p. 125, 131). Indeed, there is no
indication in the novel that Tom ever feels that he has participated in that other
world or that he has at last become established. Though he is always aware that,
in some way, he is not fulfilled, he never discovers how to achieve self-fulfillment.
In the case of Will and Anna the pattern is the same; the emphasis is on the
male's search for self-satisfaction, and the quest is unsuccessful. Once Anna has
forced Will to realize the narrowness of his religious conception and
passion,
a process that culminates in the Lincoln Cathedral scene, Will is left without
the senses of meaningfulness and belonging that have
previously, though without
Will's awareness, pervaded and defined his being. He attempts, at first, to deal
with this newly created absence by maintaining a faith in religious symbols
themselves, in spite of their invalidity as representations: "Still he loved the Church.
As a symbol, he loved it ... for what it tried to represent, rather than for that
which it did represent" (p. 203). "The water had not turned into wine. But for
all that he would live in his soul as if the water had turned into wine" (p. 169).
154 COLLEGEENGLISH
And Will complements this belief in the "as if" by taking on various church
related roles: he does repair work in the church, conducts the choir, and
teaches Sunday school classes. Yet, as time passes, it becomes clear that Will has
not succeeded in finding an adequate substitute for his lost belief and the sus-
taining sense of himself it gave him. At one point, because "Education" comes
into "the forefront as a subject of interest" among the public (p. 235), he begins
to teach night-classes in woodwork. At a later point he takes up wood carving
anew, a craft he had enjoyed twenty years previously, before he married Anna.
But he finds that "he could not quite hitch on-always he was too busy, too
uncertain, confused" (p. 354). He turns to modeling in clay. Yet he discovers
that "the pitch of concentration would not come"; so, "With a little ash in his
mouth he gave up" (p. 354). Then he tries, in succession, painting, making
jewelry, and working with metal-but these too fail to satisfy. And at age
forty, in his final appearance in the novel, Will is seen making one more attempt.
This time he is planning to move to Beldover, where he is to become "Art and
Handicraft Instructor for the County of Nottingham," and where once again
he will seek "coming into his own" (p. 418). However, though Will seems
to have a clearer idea than does Tom of how to proceed in order to gain self-
satisfaction, there is no suggestion that he ever succeeds; there is no indication
that he ever discovers a role or activity that compensates for what has been lost
and that allows him a sense of self-fulfillment.
But in the case of Ursula and Skrebensky, the third instance of this element,
and the one the novel treats most extensively, the situation is radically different.
Here, for the first time, the emphasis is on the female's attempt at self-realization,
and here there is at least a symbolic suggestion of hope with respect to the at-
tempt. Early in her life, Ursula displays an acute and troubling sense that she must
somehow achieve self-definition: "As Ursula passed from girlhood towards wom-
anhood, gradually the cloud of self-responsibility gathered upon her. She became
aware of herself, that she was a separate entity in the midst of an unseparated
obscurity, that she must go somewhere, she must become something. And she was
afraid, troubled. Why, oh why must one grow up, why must one inherit this
heavy, numbing responsibility of living an undiscovered life? Out of the nothing-
ness and the undifferentiated mass, to make something of herself!" (p. 281). And
for Ursula, to "become something" is not merely to take on socially respectable
roles. Most people, according to Ursula, "assume selves as they assume suits of
clothing.... 'They think it better to be clerks or professors than to be the dark,
fertile beings that exist in the potential darkness'" (p. 448). It is this "darkness"
Ursula intends to explore in order to "make something of herself"; it is authentic
selfhood that she seeks. Accordingly, as a girl Ursula resists the influence of peo-
ple in general-the "mob lying in wait for her"-and of her own family; she
realizes that both offer only "the commonplace, the average," and are, therefore,
antagonistic to her "undiscovered self" (p. 269). Similarly, as a young woman
Ursula recognizes that "the machine" (p. 349) that is the society of the colliers
and that people such as Winifred Inger and Uncle Tom give themselves to is a
form of death-in-life, and must, therefore, be opposed if the possibility of selfhood
is to be preserved. And, a few years later Ursula perceives that even the woman's
Structuralismas a Method of LiteraryCriticism 155
dominance from the diminution of the male's power, or the attempts at self-
realization made by a member of a couple from the quality of the relationship
he or she is involved in. Yet, it has been maintained above not only that struc-
turalist literary criticism reveals a work's underlying structures and their com-
ponents, but also that it seeks structural correspondences between the work and
other modes of being. As Judy Osowski puts it in her review of structuralism,
it is "a critical activity that offers a theory and method for placing a work in a
larger perspective . . ." that "extends systems of the work into, and relates them
with, the outer world of other systems."12
Well, according to Erich Neumann, one of the most serious and pervasive
problems of modern western civilization is its overwhelmingly patriarchal struc-
ture. Indeed, in Neumann's opinion, patriarchy represents to the "psychologist of
culture" one of the main causes for "the peril of present-day mankind."13The
basis for Neumann's maintaining that a condition of "peril" exists and that patri-
archy is a major cause of this condition is complex, but two factors are relevant
here. First, in a patriarchy the female is not allowed to contribute substantially
to the form and development of the society; accordingly, the society is deprived
of the benefits that can be gained only by allowing such participation. Admitted-
ly, there is controversy as to what the female contributes that the male cannot-
in Neumann's view, it is a greater oneness with the unconscious-but, undoubtedly,
a species which exists in a form that allows only minimal participation by one of
its two sexes will be restricted, indeed, one-sided, in its development and in its
definition of itself. Second, and this factor is closely related to the first, neither the
male nor the female in a patriarchy is able to achieve what Neumann (and Jung
before him) terms "psychic wholeness"; both sexes are limited to developing
aspects of their selves that are in accordance with patriarchal values. Elements of
one's personality, be one male or female, that are not esteemed by the patriarchal
world view will not be cultivated; if their existence is not wholly denied, it will
certainly be repressed. The result will be that individuals in a patriarchal society
will have little chance of self-realization and that, correspondingly, the society as a
whole will suffer. For, as Neumann points out, "a sound individual is the basis for
a sound community" (p. xlii). It is true that these two circumstances would obtain
in a matriarchy also: one sex would not be allowed full participation, and mem-
bers of both sexes would be thwarted in their attempts at self-fulfillment. Both
forms of society, after all, are one-sided. But the present concern is the patriarchal
structure which now prevails. In Neumann's view, it is clear that this structure's
inability to take advantage of and allow for the expression of its female members,
and its incapacity with respect to the self-fulfillment of all of its members, are
"threatening the existence of Western mankind . . . (p. 57). It is also clear to
Neumann that the imbalance which constitutes this threat and which has become
a definining element in the society's structure suggests its own solution: "Western
mankind must arrive at a synthesis that includes the feminine world . . . (p. xlii).
and
12Judy Osowski, "The Structuralist Concept of Form: Roland Barthes, George Poulet
J. Hillis Miller," Modern Schoolman 49 (1972), pp. 349, 350.
13Erich Neumann, The Great Mother: An Analysis of the Archetype, 2nd. ed., trans. Ralph
Manheim, Bollingen Series, No. 47 (Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 1963), p. xlii.
Structuralismas a Method of LiteraryCriticism 157
on Ursula's entering into and challenging of the society, the "man's world," in
order to fulfill her self, highlights not only the contrast between Ursula and her
male forebearers-it marks also the distinct differences between Ursula and her
female predecessors, and between Ursula and her male contemporaries. While
Ursula conceives of herself as, and becomes, a "traveller on the earth . . ." (p.
417), Anna, though she is aware that there is "something beyond her," merely
asks, "why should I start on the journey?" (p. 192). And whereas Ursula rejects
Skrebensky's marriage offer in order to continue her quest for her self, Skre-
bensky, nominally the inheritor of the male tradition of self-seeking, wants only
"to marry quickly, to screen himself from the darkness, the challenge of his own
soul" (p. 482). These three contrasts do not appear incidentally in the novel;
they are stressed. For through the pronounced presentation of these contrasts,
the novel makes it clear that the modern woman's role and her relation to the
male must be radically changed. Just as the society outside the novel requires
that the female's function be drastically altered and expanded if its dangerous
imbalance is to be corrected, so, homologously, The Rainbow's presentation
clearly indicates that, if the structural deficiencies of the society it presents are to
be rectified, it is this element that must undergo fundamental transformation.
Thus, in both of these additional correspondences, as in the first, that there are
intricate homologies between the fictional and social spheres is manifest.
In determining the structure and elements of The Rainbow, as well as the struc-
tural correspondences between the work and external society, the above example
of a structuralist criticism does illustrate both the applicability of the definition
and principles developed above, and the advantages of the approach. Structuralist
criticism is able to define incisively the structural components of a work of fiction
and their relations with nonfictional structures. Literary criticism is often very
inept in the first of these functions, and is almost always so in the second. Literary
criticism definitely needs a methodology which enables it to relate the work and
its criticism to other spheres of existence. But here a few qualifications must be
submitted. First, the above structuralist analysis establishes only the relations be-
tween The Rainbow and the society of which it is a part; notwithstanding the
claims made in the preceding elaboration of the theory, it does not go on to
illustrate the possible correspondences the work might have with other nonliterary
realms, such as mythology, or religion. It is not that this is impossible; it is that
such a task exceeds the scope of this brief example. Second, although the analysis
does show that there are structural correspondences between the fictional and the
nonfictional worlds, it does not show either that these relations are necessary ones,
or that such relations, were they expanded to include various spheres of existence,
could lead one to a paradigm of the structure of the psyche itself. But these two
them would ex-
postulates of Levi-Strauss are ignored not because to illustrate
ceed the scope of the analysis, but because, as was stated above, there is no way
to conclusively prove or disprove them.
Yet, even though structuralism may not yield a model of the mind, or at least
cannot be proven to do so, it is possible that it gives an insight into a related
matter-the structure of the reader's experience of a literary work. Osowski, in
Structuralism as a Method of Literary Criticism 159
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