Manning Reader-Response Comparison Essay, Research Paper
Josh Manning
Reader-Response Comparison
William Faulkner?s “A Rose for Emily” can have many different reader-responses, as any story can, however it is the responsibility of reader-response critics, like Robert Crosman, to determine if they are valid and helpful in understanding the story. “How Readers Make Meaning” is a failed attempt by Crosman to show that any reader response, no matter how far fetched, can be helpful in the interpretation of a story.
Reader-response critics claim that there is no one correct response to a story but all responses are correct, as long as the basics of the story are grasped. Reader-response critics do not have a set way to interpret themes of stories like new critics but instead they concentrate on how and why readers interpret themes differently. The idea of reader-responses can be traced back to the Western culture of ancient Greeks and Romans but it hit the main stream in the seventies with Stanley Fish?s theory stating that literature exists and signifies when it is read. Another reader-response critic, Wolfgang Iser, is known for his Gaps that are in the text. Iser suggests that texts contain gaps that the reader must fill in (explain) in their mind what the text is inciting.
To show that readers make the meaning of literary texts, Crosman and one of his students (Stacy) read “A Ros
Unfortunately for Crosman, using Stacy?s response to prove that different reader interpretations can be valid and helpful failed. Reader response theory is based on the idea that the reader can comprehend the basics of a text. In Stacy?s case she didn?t get the basics of the text, in fact she didn?t even realize that Emily had killed Homer Barron and slept with a his dead body for years. It is impossible to have a valid comparison of responses when the fundamentals of a text are not grasped and there lies the problem with Crosman?s argument.