“Thematology” from Comparative Literature and Literature Theory
李小清 October 2001/10/21
- Development
A. discreditedresurrected (1950s) by topos studies
Belgium—Trousson
Germany—Frenzel
United States—Harry Levin
B. Terminological uncertainty
- subject matter(stoff)/theme(thema)
- stoff: content/form/meaning, Geothe (p.125)
- Definition
- external structure: fable, plot (Petersen)
- subject matter
- motif/theme: thematological categories, not units of meaning
- meaning: problem, ideas (Jaspers, Petersen, Croce, Levin)
- “thematology”: Levin, theme
i. an avenue for a progression of ideas (p.128)
ii. polysemous, be endowed with different meanings in the face of different situations
- meaning: content category, content/meaning
image /symbol
motif /problem
theme /idea
- Frenzel:motif/symbol/stoff (content)
- Weisstein: content subject matter, theme, motif, situation, image, trait, topos(p.129)
- History
- German school
i.(thematology): consequence of German folklore study
ii.Van Tieghem’s comment (p.129-130)
iii. Paul Merker (1929-1937)
iv. Elisabeth Frenzel: dictionary of literary themes
v. Bonn School: topos studies
- French school(p.130)
- Baldensperger
- Hazard
- Van Tieghem
- Guyard: thematological realm offers many resources
- Raymond Trousson: the Prometheus theme (p.131)
- Kate Hamburger (1965): aesthetic interest shifting from action to agent, risk, (p.132)
- American school:
- Woodberry,Chandler: included thematology
- Wellek/Warren: insignificant
- Comparative Literature (journal):omit thematology
- Harry Levin: accepted thematology, The Disciplines of Criticism
- Methodology
- Stoff: preformed subject matter/raw material (Rohstoff)
- Frenzel: fable, plot (p.136)
- Weisstein: theme, stoff (combination of motifs)
- motif/theme
- motif (Frenzel):a smaller thematic unit, an element pertaining to content and situation (p.138)
- motif (Trousson): a large concept denoting either a certain attitude or a basic impersonal situation (p.138-9),theme
- motifs relate to situations; themes to characters
- situation: groups of human views, feelings, mode of behavior, give rise to actions
- theme (unlimited)—motif (100)—situation (36)
- situation/motif
- situation: so general not to be limited to one civilization
- motif: subject to temporal, geographical limitations, idiosyncrasies(p.140)
- theme: narrower in scope than motif, limited by time & place
- theme & the flaw/success of a work (p.141)
- type:(p.141)
i. the embodiment of a motif (a character’s trait) that never attains individuation intervenes between the concepts of theme & motif
ii. characters in the formative stage, thematic modes, not prototype
iii. better suited for analogy studies
- heroic theme/situational theme (Troussen)
- heroic theme (p.142)
- focuses on the character of the hero
- a choice of specific situation is moot, for most of the characters have outgrown the frame of reference
- endless proliferation of phenomena,variation, incomplete
- situational theme (p.143)
- action resulting from the interplay of the figures
- completeness can be aimed at, involve specific milieus and confrontations, historical themes
iii. themes as exhaustible while motifs as inexhaustible
iv. theme & genre
- motif (p.145)
- content, not transmission of a thematic patterns, but the thematic unity of a poet’s work
- study of motifs is not comparative, but monographic
- comparative only at the universal level of complexes or archetypes
- situation (p.144)
- divergent feelings or thoughts reflected in an action or conflict
- arises from a conflict between two principal directions of effort
- dramatic nexus takes the form of a sequence of actions & situations, the situation resulting from actions
- situations can be reshuffled in numerous ways
- motifs are abstractly combined, while situations are sequential
H. Thematological links (p.147)
i. action: physical activity, dynamic
ii. situation: pregnant moment from which all the motifs of the action evolve; more closely linked to structure than to content
iii. motif: abstracted from concrete reality, static, difficult to trace
iv. type: the embodiment of a motif
- theme: the ideal objects of study
- Smallest thematic units (p.148)
- Trait: can be raised to the level of the motif by means of a pointe(point) that shows it to be characteristic or symptomatic
- Image: a cluster of images provides a clue to the author’s intention
- Topos: literary commonplace; the interpenetration of originality, traditions, and imitation thus constitutes an important factor