EDUCATING THE LITERARY TASTE by Paz Latorena
It was a Spanish thinker and
moralist, Baltazar Gracian, who first used and popularized the term, hombre de
buen gusto, during the seventeenth century, although by it, he simply meant a
tactful person. The adoption of the term in the aesthetic field took place in
France, according to literary history, and La Biuyere affirms that during his
time discussions centered on good taste and bad taste until the term grew into
wide use, and, by the beginning of the following century had established itself
in Europe.
Certainly Addison,
in one of his essays published in the Spectator, defined literary taste as the
discernment and appreciation of that which is fundamentally excellent in
literature in another essay, he defined it as a faculty which discerns the
beauties of literature with pleasure and its imperfections with dislike. These
two definitions, according to Coleridge, make of literary taste a rational
activity but with a distinctively subjective bias.
It remained for
Ruskin, however to make the distinction, between literary raste and literary
criticism with which it is being continuously confounded. He said that literary
criticism is a formal action of the intellect, a deliberate search for
perfections and imperfections by the application of universally accepted
standards to a literary composition; on the other hand, taste is the instant,
almost instinctive preferring of one literature to another, apparently for no
other reason except that the first is more proper to human nature. To have
literary taste, therefore, from the foregoing definition and distinctions, is
to have a feeling and an inclination for what is fine and beautiful in
literature, to savor and to appreciate it, and to dislike and reject what is
vulgar and tawdry in it.
There comes a time in the life of
every man when he discovers for himself or is led to discover the wide and
varied world of literature, a world ass wide and varied as the life from which
it draws its sustenance. It is a world of prose and poetry in which the
interplay of human passions, the greatness and the misery of man, his heroism
and his wickedness, his strength and his weakness, are portrayed with
relentless analysis by those whose minds have probed human life to its deepest
and most hidden springs of action. When he finds himself in that world, and
eventually he will, man will stand in need of good literary taste. For unless
he knows how to discriminate, how to separate truth from falsehood, good from
bad, the specious from the true, the meretricious from the sincere; unless he
knows how not to take the truth of the portrayal for the truth of the thing
portrayed, unless he is convinced that aptness of expression and brilliance of
diction do not turn falsehood into truth, his sense of literary values runs the
risk of being falsified.
Fortunately,
according to Sir Joshua Reynolds, taste can be taught. It can be acquired by
determined intercourse with good models. And it is one of the more important
functions of educations; that is, to train the student, the seeker of light, to
distinguish between pleasures that are becoming to a man and pleasures that are
unbecoming to him, to find delight in what ought to delight him, and to feel
repulsion for what ought to repel him, especially in the field of literature.
The popularity of literature courses
in high school and college augurs well for the development of a sound,
wholesome, literary taste. A great deal of the works and the responsibility
falls on the teacher whose attitude towards the teaching of literature should
be, that the interpretation and the appreciation of the individual authors and
their works are important nor so much in themselves, but as means to the
refinement of a taste that will make of literature, when school days are over,
a source of pure pleasure and spiritual adventure for the student.
What literary
ideals, then, should the teacher emphasize? What literary standards should
guide him in the selection of the literature, intercourse with which would
develop good literary taste? In other words, what literary values make the
literature that can serve that end?
First, there is
the intellectual value of literature. By intellectual value we mean something
in a literary composition which makes the reader think to some purpose so that
his mental life is enriched and enlarged as a result.
The other arts do not place great
emphasis on intellectual value, Music, painting, sculpture, the dance — all
these appeal primarily through the sense and they convey beauty through ear and
eye. The sound and sight in themselves enrich the senses. Yet all arts have
some intellectual appeal. How much more must literature, appealing through the
physical or the mind’s eye to the mind itself and setting up a train of ideas,
consider intellectual content important?This does not
mean, however, that all literature must present a profound truth, solve a
pressing intellectual problem, make its readers think a long and deeply. In
intellectual value, as in other matters, there are degrees. We would be very
reluctant to condemn a charming romance by Stevenson, a sparkling comedy of the
Quinter brothers, the delightful society versus of the French, even the
glamorous poetry of Swinburne from all of which we have had so much and so many
kinds of pleasure even though the intellectual value be slight.
But all great
literature, that of universal and enduring appeal, will, upon close scrutiny,
be found to contain a high degree of intellectual value. No play of Shakespeare
or Calderon de la Barca, no perm of Dante or Milton, no novel of Tolstol or
Hardy is without the quality that appeals to the human mind and enlarges it.
And the high
quality that appeals to the human mind and enlarges it is truth; better still
the truth as presented by literature. Not the truth that is mere information or
that is factual, but the truth that imagination and art transmute from merely
dry bines put together into breath and life. Not the truth supplied by
romanticism alone, or realism, or idealism or naturalism, but a truth that does
not depend on such methods but on something more fundamental. The romantic may
be as true as the realistic; the idealist may look at life as truly as
naturalist. The point is that human life and human experience which is the
stuff of literature os a complex thing; It is neither wholly material nor
wholly spiritual; it is neither completely ascribed by the details of physical
existence nor entirely given to dream. It is compounded experience, invariably
the more sordid side – and this is our first brief against much of the
literature of our own days – contains only part of the truth and falsifies values.
From literature sans intellectual
value, and therefore not literature at all, from literature that contains
half-truths and falsified human values, from literature that leaves the reader
unsatisfied, food taste should be trained to shrink from.Second, there is
the emotional value of literature which is as significant as its intellectual
value. An appeal to the emotions is the distinguishing mark of any literature
worth its name. And even the dullness of novels, the flattest of dramatic
failures, the worst poem show an endeavour to express and to arouse emotion.For purposed of
literature, the term “emotion” may be made largely inclusive. Under the shadows
of the two main classes, pleasant and unpleasant emotions, there walk many
experiences that we commonly call moods, feelings, attitudes.Strangely enough,
the so-called pleasant emotions have had very little appeal for writers. Fried,
pathos, fear,, even horror have stirred the creative faculty more than
happiness and serenity, from Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound to Sheriff’s Journey’s
End. And the obvious explanation is that life is more of the material of
tragedy and of pathos and thr writer takes what gives him most and uses it.
However, literature proves that it
can take the unpleasant and the painful from life and so represent them that
pleasure and not pain is the resulting emotion of the reader, Otherwise tragedy
would repel and not attract. But in art, literature in particular, there is
always, associated with the painful, even with the horrible, something which
arouses desirable emotions. The desirable element may be closesly associated
with the painful stimulus itself or it may be in the effect which the painful
stimulus have upon the reader. The figure of a weak man might be contemptible,
but in arouses pity. An act of cruelty and injustice may give painful emotions
to the reader and at the same time stir moral indignation which in itself is
healthy, the war poems of Siegfried Sasson would be almost unbearable because
of the horrors they depict were it not for the suggestions of heroism and
sacrifice and for the hope they carry, the eventual abolition of war. Here are
emotions growing out of and involved with out contempt but they satisfy,
enlarge, and ennoble. So in larger scenes of horror, tragedy or pathos, our
pleasure in the nobility that withstands pain and evil, our sympathy with
suffering lift us out of the realm of the merely unpleasant or painful. Thus
almost any emotion may be represent in art, no matter how painful, no matter
how unpleasant, if the imagination of the writer finds it in meanings and
associations that arouse wholesome and pleasurable feelings.
The statement that
literature should appeal to the noble and higher emotions invariably brings
forth the question of what the nobles and higher emotions are. To which the
answer is that they are those emotions and feelings and attitudes which are
ours because we are human beings and not animals, those emotion which control
our conduct as moral beings, those emotions that move us to right and happy
living. And those are the emotions which a good literary taste instinctively
looks for in literature and without which literature would have very little
account for its being.
Third, there is the ethical value of
literature which has more frequently been a storm center than either of the
other content values. Emphasis on the ethical significance of literature has
been derided as frequently as it has been demanded. Art of art’s sake has been
a cry raised on and off, especially in modern times, but it has been countered
by the works of great didactic writers, from Plato to Tolstoy. It is not for us
here to take sides as to which the correct concept of the end of literature is,
didactic, that is for instruction as Plato says, or aesthetic, that is for
pleasure Aristotle holds. We have always favored Horace who believes in
literature that both teaches and delights. But this we know, that literature
that is immoral does not and cannot delight man, much less instruct him. Judgement
as to what constitutes immorality in literature varies greatly. Let us, for
one, consider the morality of expression. There are those who believe that
frankness of speech does not consulate immorality. In fact, they hold, it is
healthier to speak frankly of the normal facts of life than to veil in
imperfectly, even maliciously. The use of concealing phrases which probably
deceive nobody is often far more suggestive, far more over stimulating to the
imagination that modern frankness.
We believe that there is a grain of
truth in that contention. However, when language goes beyond the normal express
of abnormality, and so gives the reader unhealthy information and stimulates
the morbid imagination, then it is immoral. Its aim becomes not that expressing
of truth but obscenity. The conclusion of this matter of morality or immorality
in expression is that it is not so much a question of the words that are used
as the purposes for which they are used. Which brings us to the consideration
of the morality of the theme. There are those who hold that a literary
composition, the theme of which is immorality is not necessarily immoral. The
history of literature, they contend, shows that there are a few books that
deals with vice and crime of some sort. Were we therefore reject as immoral all
the literature dealing with vice and crime we would have to banish creative
writing as a whole. The Illiad, Oedipus Tyrannus, Macbeth, Faust are not
immoral books.
That we admit. But there are books
that deal with similar themes and are definitely immoral. What makes the
difference?Obviously, the
answer lies in the purpose and aim of the writer and in his emphasis. If the
aim of the writer is to focus this attention of the readers upon evil for
evil’s own sake, his purpose is degrading; consequently his book is immoral.
The realist will say that the writer
portraying life should present vice as attractive. True. But the attractiveness
of vice is not the whole truth about it. Great writers have presented vice as attractive
but they have also presented the ashes into which that attractiveness turns, if
we yield to its lure. That is representing the whole of life, which usually
includes reaction, and later, retribution.
An appeal to facts shows that all
supreme literatures have a positive ethical value. Creative writing, emanating
from and dealing with man’s experience, must have some reference to his
conduct. And since we are men and not animals, since we are moral beings with a
conscience, good literary taste demands that in all literature there should be
found a positive influence that will bring us higher values, both as
individuals and as members of a social order.
There are witnesses in the world
today a cult of the formless and the ugly in the various arts of human life,
but in manifests itself more strongly and shamelessly in literature,
particularly in the novel and the drama. And as for the motion picture, it
fairly reeks with it. The effect on society and individual is distressing.
I conclude, education must erect
barriers against rampant vulgarity. And good taste is not only a barrier but a
means of devulgarization; a taste that is attuned to the fine and beautiful, a
taste out of sympathy with the false and the ignoble, a taste that would be one
of the instruments for richer living.
PAZ LATORENA (19 January 1908 = 19 October 1953) Born in Boac, Marinduque, Philippines in 1907, Paz Latorena was one of the accomplished female writers in English during the pre-war era. She spent her first three years of college at the University of the Philippines but transferred her senior year to the University of Santo Tomas (UST) where she completed an education degree in 1930. She continued her graduate studies thereafter, and was subsequently invited to teach at UST upon completion of a doctoral dissertation that received high honors/ Before her recognition as a short story writer, she had a writing stint at Philippines Herald upon the invitation of her mentor, Paz Marquez Benitez. She became a popular short story writer whose works steadily gained recognition over the years. In 2000, UST published her only collection of short fiction, Desired and Other Stories. This publication came 47 years after she died. Her most popular story “A Small Key” was deemed third best by a renowned poet and critic Jose Garcia Villa in his famous rankings.
this is a well written essay
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