New Criticism is a style of literary criticism, alongside Formalism, New Historicism, Reader-Response criticism, Biographical criticism, and Psychological criticism. As a style, New Criticism emerged in the 1920s, with the name of the style deriving from John Crowe Ransom's The New Criticism (1941). Prior to Ransom's book, this literary theory did not have a name; however, it was in use, with I.A. Richards being credited as the foundational figure who developed New Criticism in the 1920s with his books Principles of Literary Criticism (1924) and Practical Criticism (1929).
Under New Criticism, as explained in works like the book Principles of Literary Criticism (1924), the reader does not need outside information. As explained within the Poetry Foundations article "New Criticism," this includes information like the historical context, as it has little effect on the work's values. Instead, literary devices, by variety and degree, are the focus of literary criticism- including devices like symbolism and metaphor. Additionally, this style is supposed to push for a more intimate reading of the texts, with attention to both form and the meaning of the work (as well as the device's meaning within the work).
In addition to New Criticism's focus on close reading, literary devices, and form, New Criticism has three fallacies:
How these fallacies apply to critical reading and writing: