- Mon Dec 11, 2023 2:47 pm
#104384
Hi jmurphy1,
Unfortunately, Answer A is actually the opposite of what Borges believed.
If the genre was fully determined by the author's intention, then the reader would be completely unnecessary to the process. For example, an author could write a story that the author intends to be in the detective genre and then it is now part of that genre, even if nobody else ever reads it.
This directly contradicts Borge's view that literature "requires the conjunction of reader and text" (lines 13-14) and "the participation of the reader is not extrinsic but instead essential to the literary text" (lines 17-18).
The final sentence of Passage A clarifies this point, "Thus what unites works belonging to the same genre is the way that they are read rather than, say, a set of formal elements found within the work" (my emphasis, lines 19-21). The formal elements within the work are the parts that the author controls, but these are not what determines the genre.
The observation that Poe "subsequently created the reader of detective fiction" (lines 4-5) is tricky and easy to misunderstand, but it doesn't imply that Poe alone created the readers' reactions to his text. Instead, the readers responded to Poe's detective stories in certain ways and that conjunction of reader and text is what forms the genre according to Borge.