Reader-response theory shifts the locus of meaning from the text or author to the reader as an active co-producer of literary meaning. Texts are not self-sufficient structures but events completed in the act of reading.
1. WOLFGANG ISER — The Implied Reader and Textual Gaps
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Interaction between text and reader |
| Orientation | Phenomenological reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Implied reader |
| View of text | Structured with “gaps” (Leerstellen) |
| Role of reader | Fills interpretive gaps |
| Method | Phenomenology of reading |
| Key works | The Act of Reading |
| Meaning model | Dynamic interaction |
| Signature trait | Text is incomplete without reader |
Core structure:
Text → gaps → reader → meaning completion
2. STANLEY FISH — Interpretive Communities and Institutional Reading
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Social production of meaning |
| Orientation | Pragmatic reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Interpretive communities |
| View of text | Meaning exists within communities, not objects |
| Role of reader | Member of socially conditioned interpretive group |
| Method | Reception-based analysis |
| Key works | Is There a Text in This Class? |
| Meaning model | Socially constructed interpretation |
| Signature trait | No stable text outside interpretation |
Core structure:
Community → interpretive rules → meaning production
3. HANS ROBERT JAUSS — Horizon of Expectations
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Historical reception of texts |
| Orientation | Reception aesthetics (Konstanz School) |
| Key concept | Horizon of expectations |
| View of text | Meaning changes across historical periods |
| Role of reader | Historically situated interpreter |
| Method | Historical reception analysis |
| Key works | Toward an Aesthetic of Reception |
| Meaning model | Temporal transformation |
| Signature trait | Text meaning evolves over time |
Core structure:
Historical context → expectations → reception → reinterpretation
4. VINCENT LEITCH — Institutional Reader-Response Criticism
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Literary institutions and interpretation |
| Orientation | Eclectic reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Institutional mediation of meaning |
| View of text | Constructed through academic practices |
| Role of reader | Institutional subject (critic, scholar) |
| Method | Theoretical synthesis |
| Key works | American Literary Criticism |
| Meaning model | Institutionally mediated |
| Signature trait | Criticism shapes reading itself |
Core structure:
Institution → reading practice → meaning construction
5. NORMAN HOLLAND — Psychological Identity and Reading
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Psychological response to literature |
| Orientation | Psychoanalytic reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Identity theme |
| View of text | Trigger for psychic patterns |
| Role of reader | Active psychological interpreter |
| Method | Psychoanalytic interpretation of reading |
| Key works | 5 Readers Reading |
| Meaning model | Psychological projection |
| Signature trait | Reading reflects identity structures |
Core structure:
Text → psyche → identity projection → interpretation
6. DAVID BLEICH — Subjective Criticism and Meaning Negotiation
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Subjectivity in interpretation |
| Orientation | Epistemological reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Subjective meaning construction |
| View of text | Indeterminate until read |
| Role of reader | Central meaning-maker |
| Method | Critical subjectivism |
| Key works | Subjective Criticism |
| Meaning model | Negotiated interpretation |
| Signature trait | Meaning is personal and constructed |
Core structure:
Reader subjectivity → interpretation → meaning formation
7. LOUISE ROSENBLATT — Transactional Theory of Reading
| Dimension | Position |
|---|---|
| Core focus | Interaction between reader and text |
| Orientation | Transactional reader-response theory |
| Key concept | Reader-text transaction |
| View of text | Stimulus for experiential meaning |
| Role of reader | Active participant in meaning creation |
| Method | Educational-literary psychology |
| Key works | The Reader, the Text, the Poem |
| Meaning model | Transactional process |
| Signature trait | Reading is event, not object |
Core structure:
Text ↔ reader → transactional meaning
8. STRUCTURAL MAP OF READER-RESPONSE THEORY
| Axis | Dominant Mode | Thinkers |
|---|---|---|
| Phenomenological reading | Textual gaps | Iser |
| Social interpretation | Communities | Fish |
| Historical reception | Temporal horizon | Jauss |
| Institutional mediation | Academic systems | Leitch |
| Psychological response | Identity projection | Holland |
| Subjective construction | Reader authority | Bleich |
| Transactional process | Interaction model | Rosenblatt |
CORE INTELLECTUAL STRUCTURE OF READER-RESPONSE THEORY
Reader-response theory redefines literature by shifting meaning from text to reading process:
Meaning is not located in the text but generated through reading acts
More precisely:
- Texts contain gaps that require completion (Iser)
- Interpretation is governed by social communities (Fish)
- Meaning changes across historical horizons (Jauss)
- Institutions shape reading practices (Leitch)
- Readers project psychological identities (Holland)
- Meaning is subjectively constructed (Bleich)
- Reading is an interactive transaction (Rosenblatt)
FINAL SYNTHESIS
Reader-response critics collectively redefine literature as:
- A dynamic event rather than a static object
- A product of reader activity and interpretation
- A system shaped by social, psychological, and historical forces
- A field where meaning is continuously produced rather than stored
Deep structure:
Text → reader → context → interpretation → meaning event