- Literary topos
Topos (literally "a place"; "pl." topoi) referred in the context of classical Greek
rhetoric to a standardised method of constructing or treating anargument . See topos in classical rhetoric.Ernst Robert Curtius expanded this concept in studying topoi as "
commonplace s": reworkings of traditional material, particularly the descriptions of standardised settings, but extended to almost any literarymeme . Critics have traced the use and re-use of such topoi from the literature ofclassical antiquity to the 18th century and beyond intopostmodern literature . This is illustrated in the study of archetypal heroes and in the theory of "The Hero With A Thousand Faces ," also the name of a book written by modern theoristJoseph Campbell .For example, oral histories passed down from pre-historic societies contain literary aspects, characters, or settings which appear again and again in stories from ancient civilizations, religious texts, and even more modern stories. The biblical
creation myth s and of "the flood" are two examples, as they are repeated in other civilizations' earliest texts (seeEpic of Gilgamesh orDeluge (mythology) ) and are seen again and again in historical texts and references.
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