Applied literature


Applied literature - a theoretical literary term created in 1932, then disseminated by Stefania Skwarczyńska. <"Applied Literature" (Skwarczyńska) is a written or oral text of a practical and useful nature, in contrast to the traditionally understood "beautiful literature" which serves pure beauty. This concept Skwarczyńska included after years in his universal theory of literature, which proclaims that "a literary work is any sense of word" (written or oral).

This concept opened the field of research for a vast area of ​​texts, both without a clear aesthetic organization and as highly elaborate. Skwarczyńska was interested in the genres of applied literature, considered novelly outside the Aristotle's genocide tradition, and described from the very beginning (as a species): the gospel, the sermon, the journal, the conversation, and much more. In 1937 she published a monograph on Theory of Letters, extensively depicting the genre of applied literature.

In view of the use of directed literature for a different set of works, traditionally understood, the literature of beauty, in which the aesthetic function prevails. Applied literature and fine literature constitute the whole of literature as, in Skwarczynska's view, all "meaningful verbal constructions." Bibliography

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