Critical/Analytic Reading(s)

Critical Dialogue = reading "against" the work, negotiating "meaning" (Analytical-critical, intersubjective, comparative )

This is the level of reading which usually takes a particular issue or thesis and explores that in detail, supporting it profusely from the text.

Analytic General Questions about Passages in Texts

Intratextual Context (The relation of the part to the whole; the primary level of literary understanding.)


Authorial Context (The relationship of text to author, and to author's other works. This requires being familiar with the author's life, works, and recurrent preoccupations.)

Historical Context (The relation of text to milieu. How has a text reflected or helped to create its culture?)

Allusive Context (The relation of text to other texts, past and present or "intertextuality." The reader's familiarity with texts presupposed by the writer.)

Generic Context (The relation of text to other texts of a similar kind, past, present, and future. Unlike Allusive Context, this consists of diachronic (cross-time) questions of literary typology not necessarily linked to authorial intent or deliberate allusions.)

Philosophical Context (The relationship of the text to the world of ideas, past, present, and future. It may include how the text can be mapped onto specific religious or philosophical systems or ideologies (e.g. Christianity, Marxism, Freudian or Jungian psychology, feminism, etc.)

Subjective Context ( The relationship of the text to the reader's experience. Although this context is often overlooked in criticism (since, by its nature, it is not subject to any kind of rigorous argumentation or research), it is nonetheless the primary reason that authors write: to engage a reader's sympathetic interest by appealing to commonalities of experience.)