LITERARY GENRE

A 'literary genre' is a genre of literature, that is "a loose set of criteria for a category of literary composition", depending on literary technique, Anthropologist]] 1983, p.195

Contents
Subgenres
List of literary genres
Notes
References

Subgenres


Genres are often divided into subgenres. Literature, for instance, is divided into three basic kinds of literature, classic genres of Ancient Greece, poetry, drama, and prose. Poetry may then be subdivided into epic, lyric, and dramatic. Subdivisions of drama includes foremost comedy and tragedy, while eg. comedy itself has subgenres, including farce, comedy of manners, burlesque, satire, and so on. However, any of these terms would be called "genre", and its possible more general terms implied.
To be even more flexible, hybrid forms of different terms have been used, like a prose poem or a tragicomedy. Science fiction has many recognized subgenres; a science fiction story may be rooted in real scientific expectations as they are understood at the time of writing (see Hard science fiction). A more general term, coined by Robert A. Heinlein, is "speculative fiction," an umbrella term covering all such genres that depict alternate realities. Even fiction that depicts innovations ruled out by current scientific theory, such as stories about or based on faster-than-light travel, are still science fiction, because science is a main subject in the piece of art.
Dramatic poetry, for instance, might include comedy, tragedy, melodrama, and mixtures like tragicomedy. This parsing into subgenres can continue: "comedy" has its own genres, for example, including comedy of manners, sentimental comedy, burlesque comedy, and satirical comedy.
Often, the criteria used to divide up works into genres are not consistent, and may change constantly, and be subject of argument, change and challenge by both authors and critics. However, even a very loose term like fiction ("literature created from the imagination, not presented as fact, though it may be based on a true story or situation") is not universally applied to all fictitious literature, but instead is typically restricted to the use for novel, short story, and novella, but not fables, and is also usually a prose text.
A subgenre may join non-contradicting criteria: ''Romance'' and ''mystery'' are marked out by their plots, and ''Western'' by its setting, which means that a work can easily be a Western romance or Western mystery.
Genres may be easily be confused with literary techniques, but though only loosely defined, they are not the same, examples are parody, Frame story, constrained writing, stream of consciousness.

List of literary genres



Autobiography, Memoir, Spiritual autobiography

Biography

Campus novel

Children's literature

Comedy

Diaries and Journals

Erotic literature

Epic


Haiku


Lied


Lyric


Ode


Rhapsody


Song


Limerick


Sonnet


Speculative poetry

Essay

Fable, Fairy tale

Fiction


Adventure novel


Crime fiction



Detective fiction



Hardboiled



Whodunit



Newgate novel, Prison literature


Historical fiction


Fantasy (for more details see Fantasy subgenres; fantasy literature)


Gothic fiction (initially synonymous with horror)



Southern Gothic



Mystery fiction



Horror




Lovecraftian horror




Weird menace



Thriller




Conspiracy fiction




Legal thriller




Spy fiction/Political thriller




Techno-thriller




Psychological thriller


Science fiction (for more details see Science fiction genres and related topics)

Medical novel

Philosophical novel

Romance

Romance novel


Historical romance


Regency romance


Chick lit



Matron lit

Saga, Family Saga

Slave narrative

Satire

Tragedy


Revenge tragedy

literary criticism

Magic Realism and Dictator Novels, Latin American genres

Non-fiction; Oral Narrative (Oral History)

Poetry (see that article for an extensive list of sub-genres)


Aubade


Clerihew


Rhymed prose


★ ''Maqama''


★ ''Saj'''


★ ''Fu (literature)''

Travel literature

Western

Notes


References



Bakhtin, M. M. (1981) ''The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays''. Ed. Michael Holquist. Trans. Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. Austin and London: University of Texas Press.

★ John D. Dorst ''Neck-Riddle as a Dialogue off Genres: Applying Bakhtin's Genre Theory'' The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 96, No. 382 (Oct. - Dec., 1983), pp. 413-433 doi:10.2307/540982

Derrida, Jacques ''The Law of Genre'' ''[Critical Inquiry]'' Vol. 7, No. 1, On Narrative. (Autumn, 1980), pp. 55-81. [1]. essay contained in ''On Narrative'' W.J.T. Mitchell, ed. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.

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