ESSENCE AND SIGNIFICANCE OF LITERATURE (Dones, 2009) Flashcards
Literature (origin of the term – _________ which means letter) deals with ideas, thoughts, and emotions of man—thus it can be said that literature is the _________ (Kahayon, 2998, p. 5-7)
litera; story of man
Literature comes from the French phrase “__________,” means beautiful writing (Baritugo, et al., 2004, p.1).
belles-letters
Literature in its broadest sense, is everything that has _________.
ever written
The best way to understand human nature fully and to know a _______ completely is to study literature (Garcia et al., 1993, p.3)
nation
Through literature, we learn the innermost feelings and thoughts of people—the most real part of themselves, thus we gain an understanding not only of others, but more importantly, of ourselves and of life itself (________, et al., 1993, p.4).
Garcia
Literature offers us an experience in which we should participate as we read and test what we read by our own experience.
Literature does not yield much unless we bring something of ourselves to it.
Literature is a faithful preproduction of life… in a sense it is a product and a commentary on life process.
Literature illuminates life.
Literature is our life’s story including its struggles, ideals, failures, sacrifice, and happiness (Ang, 2006).
Literature appeals to man’s higher nature and its needs—emotional, spiritual, intellectual, and creative. Like all other forms of art, literature entertains and gives pleasures; it fires the imagination and arouses noble emotions and it enriches man by enabling him to reflect on life and by filling him new ideas (Garcia et al., 1993, p. 1-3).
Literature is one of the seven arts (i.e. music, dance, painting, sculpture, theatre, and architecture, and as such literature is a product of a creative work, the result of which is a form and beauty (Nuggets, 1999, p.2).
Why do people read literature—for information, for amusement, for higher and keener pleasure, for cultural upliftment, and for discovery of broader dimensions in life (Nuggets, 1999, p. 2-3).