Lamenting the loss versus the fallacy of extinct literary genres in world literature

Other Title(s)

ظاهرة انقراض الأجناس الأدبية في الأدب العالمي بين الحقيقة و التصور الخاطئ

Joint Authors

Mahfuz, Safi M.
Salam, Wail Jumah

Source

Dirasat : Human and Social Sciences

Issue

Vol. 48, Issue 1 (31 Mar. 2021), pp.528-541, 14 p.

Publisher

University of Jordan Deanship of Academic Research (DAR)

Publication Date

2021-03-31

Country of Publication

Jordan

No. of Pages

14

Main Subjects

Languages & Comparative Literature

Abstract EN

This article explores some ostensibly extinct literary genres in world literature.

The theoretical thrust of this article is based on Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of chronotope, Gregory Bateson’s concept “ecology of the mind”, and Hubert Zapf’s concept “literature as a cultural ecology.” The main objective of the article is to show whether literary genres really become extinct or rather integrate into others to be reborn or to give life to new genres.

Regeneration, resurrection and rebirth are not germane to species, but are also inclusive of literary genres.

This hypothesis would prove the fallacy of the extinction of literary genres in world literature.

Just like animals, some literary genres become extinct and new ones emerge.

The array of the seemingly extinct literary genres in world literature is huge, so the current study will be limited to discussing a handful of these genres as illustrative examples.

Extinct literary genres include the epic, trilogies, classical tragedies, morality plays, shadow plays, the Arabic māqamāt, oral literature, ballads, odes, sonnets, the Japanese poetry "Haiku", the Chinese Shenmo “martial arts novels”, Zhiguai fiction “folkloric myths”, metaphysical poetry, confessional poetry, pastoral poetry, fairy tales, the Bildungsroman, diaries, memoires, and many others.

The study shows that technology, modernization, globalization and people’s changing preferences have resulted in the alleged extinction of many outdated literary genres and the emergence of new genres such as screenplays, sitcoms, soap operas, movies and cyberspace literature.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Mahfuz, Safi M.& Salam, Wail Jumah. 2021. Lamenting the loss versus the fallacy of extinct literary genres in world literature. Dirasat : Human and Social Sciences،Vol. 48, no. 1, pp.528-541.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1363142

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Mahfuz, Safi M.& Salam, Wail Jumah. Lamenting the loss versus the fallacy of extinct literary genres in world literature. Dirasat : Human and Social Sciences Vol. 48, no. 1 (2021), pp.528-541.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1363142

American Medical Association (AMA)

Mahfuz, Safi M.& Salam, Wail Jumah. Lamenting the loss versus the fallacy of extinct literary genres in world literature. Dirasat : Human and Social Sciences. 2021. Vol. 48, no. 1, pp.528-541.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1363142

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Record ID

BIM-1363142