Literary and theoretical texts for all your Formalism needs.
Primary Literary Texts
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne (1759)
It's a novel that begins with a description of the narrator's parents having sex. Need we say more? So cogitate this: How does Sterne use digression in this novel? How do Tristram's endless digress...
Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka (1915)
Imagine waking up as a huge icky bug one morning. Would you just hop out of bed, brew your coffee, and dash to catch the bus? Follow Gregor Samsa's odyssey in the Metamorphosis to find out whether...
Cane by Jean Toomer (1923)
Toomer vividly and poetically depicts African-American life in the south during the Jim Crow era. And there's lots of imagery of sugar cane in this book. Sweeeet! (Yes, the sugar part. The vestiges...
Translations from the Natural World by Les Murray (1992)
Don't we all want to talk to our pets? Well, Murray makes birds, cows, bats, and other favorites of the animal kingdom talk in this book of poetry about nature and animals. And he makes them do it...
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard (1966)
Two minor characters from Shakespeare's Hamlet take center-stage in this play. And they're pretty clueless. Lots of comedy (and of course, tragedy) ensues. Why does Stoppard write a whole play fro...
Primary Theoretical Texts
"Art as Technique" by Viktor Shklovsky (1916)
Shklovsky was only 24 years old when he wrote this essay that would revolutionize literary criticism. Did we mention he was only 24? Yeah, we can't get over it. According to Shklovsky, why is "defa...
"Sterne's Tristram Shandy: Stylistic Commentary" by Viktor Shklovsky (1921)
This Vik was an ambitious guy—not only did he get through the thousands-page tomes of Tolstoy; he also plodded through the nine volumes of Sterne's digressive masterpiece. Watch Shklovsky in acti...
"On Realism in Art" by Roman Jakobson (1921)
Jakobson tries to define that vague, magical thing, "literariness," which he says is the true object of literary "science." Isn't that some kind of oxymoron?First thing's first. What is the differe...
"Problems in the Study of Literature and Language" by Roman Jakobson and Yuri Tynyanov (1928)
Jakobson and Tynyanov talk about the laws governing the evolution of literature. It's written in bullet points. And it's super complicated. Got it? Got it. Why is it so important to understand the...
"The Theory of the 'Formal Method'" by Boris Eikhenbaum (1926)
Formalism summarized and explained in one essay. Yes. Warning: it's still pretty dense. What trends in literary criticism were the Formalists reacting against when they began theorizing about poet...