Do you think there is such thing as a 'correct' interpretation of a piece of literature? Are the author's intentions the only thing that matters?
A couple of weeks ago a friend of mine asked if the essay we were reading in English class was the 'correct interpretation' of the poem we were studying, and the idea has been bugging me ever since. The idea of having one (or even several) 'correct' interpretations just doesn't seem right to me. I see literature as being about the reader's interaction with the text, and obviously everyone has different experiences, and so everyone will see something different in the text.
These ideas are also coming from things that I thought when I read Thomas C. Foster's How to Read Literature Like a Professor. In the chapter on symbolism, he begins by saying that if a student asks if something is a symbol, he always says yes. When they ask what it's a symbol of, he asks what they think, because that's what it is - for them at least. So far, so good. But later, in a sort of 'intermission' chapter where the author addresses the reader's question about whether an author can really think about all the stuff he's been talking about at the same time, he says that they can and they do. I would say that they can, and sometimes they do, but even when they don't, we can still 'correctly' analyse these ideas/techniques/symbols/whatever, even if the author didn't put it there deliberately.


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For any written or spoken literature whatsoever.
