Language Arts: Literary Theory: Marxist and Historical Criticism
Analyzing literature through class, power, and historical context
Language Arts: Literary Theory: Marxist and Historical Criticism
Analyzing literature through class, power, and historical context
Language Arts - Grade 9-12
- 1
In your own words, explain what Marxist literary criticism focuses on when analyzing a text.
Think about who has power, who works, and who benefits.
Marxist literary criticism focuses on class, money, labor, power, and inequality in a text. It asks how characters are shaped by economic systems and whether the story supports or challenges social hierarchies. - 2
In your own words, explain what historical criticism focuses on when analyzing a text.
Historical criticism focuses on the time period in which a text was written or set. It examines events, beliefs, social customs, laws, and conflicts that may have influenced the author, characters, plot, or themes. - 3
Complete this comparison: Marxist criticism and historical criticism are similar because they both look beyond the plot, but they are different because Marxist criticism focuses especially on blank, while historical criticism focuses especially on blank.
One lens emphasizes economic power. The other emphasizes time and context.
Marxist criticism focuses especially on class, labor, wealth, and economic power, while historical criticism focuses especially on the historical period, events, values, and social conditions surrounding the text. - 4
Read this brief passage: The mill owner watched from the balcony as workers poured through the gates before sunrise. By noon, his guests were praising the factory's success while the workers ate bread beside the machines. Explain one Marxist interpretation of the passage.
Notice who controls the workplace and who produces the wealth.
A Marxist interpretation would focus on the unequal relationship between the mill owner and the workers. The owner gains status and wealth from the factory, while the workers perform the labor and live with difficult conditions. - 5
Using the same passage about the mill owner and workers, explain one question a historical critic might ask before interpreting it.
A historical critic might ask what time period the passage represents and what factory labor was like during that period. The critic might investigate working hours, labor laws, industrialization, and attitudes toward workers. - 6
The term superstructure refers to social institutions and ideas, such as schools, religion, art, laws, and media, that can support the economic system. In a novel, a school teaches poor students to obey wealthy employers without question. Explain how this school could be analyzed as part of the superstructure.
Ask how an institution shapes what people believe is normal or acceptable.
The school could be analyzed as part of the superstructure because it teaches students to accept an unequal economic order. Instead of encouraging them to challenge unfair labor conditions, it prepares them to obey those with wealth and power. - 7
A character says, I was born poor, so I must stay in my place. What concept would a Marxist critic most likely discuss when analyzing this statement?
A Marxist critic would likely discuss ideology, especially the belief system that teaches the character to accept class inequality as natural or unavoidable. The statement shows how social power can shape a person's sense of possibility. - 8
Choose the stronger Marxist claim and explain why it is stronger: A. The novel has many rich characters. B. The novel shows that wealth allows certain characters to control other people's choices.
A strong literary claim should be arguable, not just observable.
Claim B is stronger because it makes an interpretive argument about how wealth creates power over others. Claim A only states a fact about the presence of rich characters and does not explain the meaning of that detail. - 9
A historical critic is studying a poem written during a war. List three types of historical information that could help the critic interpret the poem.
Useful historical information could include the causes of the war, public attitudes toward the war, and the poet's personal experience during that period. Information about censorship, propaganda, and social roles could also help. - 10
Read this brief passage: The family kept a silver tea set in the parlor, though the roof leaked and the children needed shoes. Explain how a Marxist critic might interpret the silver tea set.
Consider what the object says about class identity and social pressure.
A Marxist critic might interpret the silver tea set as a symbol of class aspiration or false status. The family values an object associated with wealth and respectability even while their basic material needs are not met. - 11
A novel includes nobles, merchants, servants, and landless laborers. Use a Marxist lens to explain why the relationships among these groups matter.
From a Marxist lens, the relationships matter because they reveal a class hierarchy. The critic would examine who owns land or property, who performs labor, who depends on whom, and how the story presents inequality between social groups. - 12
A story is set in a city during a major economic depression. Explain how historical context could change a reader's interpretation of a character who steals bread.
Context can affect how readers judge a character's choices.
Historical context could help the reader understand that the character's theft may be connected to widespread unemployment, hunger, and poverty rather than simple greed. The setting can make the action seem like a response to desperate social conditions. - 13
Explain one risk of using only historical criticism and ignoring the text's language, structure, and imagery.
One risk is that the analysis may become a history report instead of a literary interpretation. A strong reading should connect historical context to specific choices in the text, such as symbols, dialogue, setting, and conflict. - 14
Write a thesis statement that uses a Marxist lens to analyze a story about a wealthy family and the workers who serve them.
Make a claim about what the story reveals about class or power.
A strong thesis could be: The story uses the contrast between the wealthy family and their workers to show how comfort for the upper class depends on the hidden labor and limited choices of the working class. - 15
Write a thesis statement that combines Marxist criticism and historical criticism for a novel set during the Industrial Revolution.
A strong thesis could be: By portraying factory owners and workers during the Industrial Revolution, the novel criticizes the class inequality created by industrial capitalism and reflects historical debates about labor, poverty, and reform.