You've probably discussed the topic before, but it struck me while reading the last few days posts about rap and Pink Floyd that people seem to have very different ideas on what is literature.
So what is literature? This is of course an eternal question in literary criticism, with several extreme positions. Russian formalism accentuated the use of literary devices; it has been said about one of the Russian Formalists that art, according to him, was "is a sum of literary and artistic devices that the artist manipulates to craft his work." On the other side of the scale you might find excerpts from a phone book published as poetry: a text becomes a work of art because of the intention of the poet. In the discussion on the forum I've been surprised to meet the very old idea that something can not be (a great) work of art because it is too profane. Apparently the literature is still judged after its moral content.
Then there is also the classical opposition between the craft and art, but let's not go there.
I personally-if anything-am mainly a follower of the intentionalist approach: if somebody made/wrote something that meant something to him, if he or she saw it as art, then it is art. Maybe it's not always great art, maybe I would like to burn it, but it's art.
How about you?


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