Thursday, 20 November 2025

Sociocultural Triggers in the Appreciation of Art and Literature | Chapter 5 | Language, Literature and Education: Research Updates Vol. 9

 

The sociocultural triggers that affect and regulate the working of art and literature in contemporary society have undergone rapid changes over the years. Today, the acceptance and appreciation of literature or any other art form defy common perceptions, parameters, and theoretical interpretations put forth by literary or art critics through their ways of analysis. The self-styled interpreters and value judges of literature or art who have their own theories to hold onto believe that literary appreciation is equivalent to extracting aesthetic lessons from texts or art forms based on established practices. Thus, the recognition and understanding of the content-bearing media, literary devices, critical commentaries, and value judgements by the art critics are believed to precede literary appreciation. However, with poststructuralism and postmodernism slowly drifting away, a wilful rejection of grand narratives has assertively brought in pluralist, reflexive, and pastiche cultures of literary and art appreciation modes. All this has led to a kind of cultural sensibility that oscillates between, synthesises, and transcends the logics of modernism and postmodernism.

 

Thus, the objective of this study is to analyse how technological advances and cultural shifts have altered the way people look upon and appreciate literature and art. The technological advances have recast the nature and scope of life on this planet in a surprisingly brief period of time. Alongside developed a new culture of literary or art appreciation was developed that was more vicarious than participatory. An array of new possibilities offered by the virtual world has also added to this visible shift in the contemporary approaches to the appreciation of art and literature.

 

The common assumption is that literature springs from spontaneous, imaginative streaks of genius that demand reflection and analysis to extract its essence, leading to delight. However, the sights and sounds emanating from the sites of performances and the scenes of entertainment make us think otherwise. There are instances that reiterate the role of the epidemic frenzy chiefly perpetuated by the visual media and internet social network groups. When entertainment becomes visualised and vicarious, frenzy develops from the impulsive outbursts of the mind submerged in virtual reality. There is entertainment even in those events and emotions that are capable of generating crude excitement. There used to be a time when art and literature offered soothing tranquillity to troubled minds, but now it is the frenzied mind that sets the norms of excellence in addition to its blatant indulgence in meanness and crudity. The study, therefore, tries to establish that the virtual media-driven frenzy is systematically displacing traditional reflective and critical analysis as the dominant mode of literary appreciation, raising questions about the future of critical engagement with art and literature.

 

People these days move on rapidly, leaving behind the objects that entertain them. They never pause to have a closer look, nor do they reflect on the objects that captured their attention or imagination. How can, then, their appreciation and ways of entertainment exhibit deep levels of thinking solidly backed up by theories and ideologies? Thus, appreciation becomes highly relative to individual sensitivity and impulsive, attitudinal responses that abruptly erupt with the assistance of viral marketing or by the manipulation of public sentiments in social media circles. Literary or art appreciation, therefore, shows the impact of impulsive impressions rather than a premeditated or aesthetically fine-tuned sensibility obtained from works of art. The post-modern reader or spectator keeps contemporary literature away from its formative function of helping man to perfect his rational essence by refining or reforming his sensibilities. On the other hand, his mode of appreciation inverts its stature to bury its intrinsic value under the floating façade of vicarious entertainment. Hence, the observable form of the exposition on the nature of appreciation is the absence of any stable formative basis.

 

Author(s) Details

Savio James V.
Mary Matha Arts & Science College, Vemom, P O Mananthavady, 670 645, Wayanad (Dist), Kerala, India.

 

Please see the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/lleru/v9/6515

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