Liberal Humanism is a
traditional approach to English Studies that stems from the works of I.A
Richards, William Empson and F. R Leavis. Liberal Humanists highlight the
agency and value of human beings, both individually and collectively. They
believe human beings essentially possess ‘free will’ and perceive themselves as
well as thers based on experience. There are some underlying aspects of liberal
humanism which have been made into the ‘ten tenets’. They serve as the
guidelines and the core for studying a text from a liberal humanist viewpoint.
The text in question is
Edgar Allen Poe’s, ‘The Oval Portrait’, is a classic
short story that narrates a
tragic tale of a young girl. What’s interesting though is that there is no
context given to the story. The narrator doesn’t identify himself, the chateau
is non-descriptive nor does he dwell on the circumstances that got him there. The
story makes sense in itself and doesn’t require the elaborate process of
placing it within a context. This serves as one of the fundamental tenets of
liberal humanism where a text should make sense in isolation. The socio-political,
literary-historical circumstances and the autobiographical details or influences
of the author need not be known for the text to make sense. Though some critics
emphasize on the need to study context, liberal humanists counter it by stating
that the ‘words on the page’ should be self sufficient and induce what’s called
‘on-sight close reading’, which allows for focus on nuances in the story.
The absence of a particular
time-frame that allows it to be placed in any epoch and the use of
understandable, everyday language makes it relatable to the audience no matter
where and when they read it or what their beliefs or values are. This brings us
to the next tenet that states that what marks a true literary piece is its
timelessness or the fact that it can be read generations later and it would
still make sense and be relatable to the reader. The story is gothic with a
sense of eeriness that brought forward by the dark setting. The story talks
about fear, beauty, love, passion and death. These are emotions which are
universal and, for the lack of a better term, eternal. Thus, the story sits
well with the tenet that “human nature is unchanging” and “continuity in literature
is more important than innovation”;i.e. the storyline may change and new topics
maybe discussed but they all should deal with the same human emotions that’s what
makes the story relatable and impactful.
The story also brings out
contrast between life and art. As liberal humanists put it, literature has the
power within it to enhance human life and evoke powerful emotions that can move
them but literature is not a means for propaganda. The story captures how art
drives a character to madness, and a damsel whose love compels her to sacrifice
her life with every stroke of her lovers brush. It brings out emotions of
empathy and a diabolic exchange of life and death.
The story thus, fits well
into the liberal humanism viewpoint. Though it can be studied from multiple
viewpoints and the approach has been criticized by some, such as the
structuralists, it stands on strong grounds and it can’t be refuted that it is
one of the first and major ways of studying literary texts.
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