Goodman's book seeks to create and demonstrate a method of literary analysis that he calls "inductive formal analysis". By this method, Goodman defines a formal structure within an isolated literary work, finding how parts of the work interact with each other to form a whole, and uses those definitions to study other works. The book applies this method to a series of individual literary works (plays, poems, verse, novels, short stories, and film) as examples, using a combination of
close reading and genre discussion. Goodman restricts his technical approach to how the parts within the work's structure interact, and avoids making value judgments of the works themselves, apart from describing "bad" literature as not integrating its parts. He discusses subtleties within a literary work such as a "hidden plot" (i.e., hidden to the protagonist) and the involvement of characters, followed by how those elements work or do not work together. His analysis considers each work's independent structure. The first chapter differentiates "inductive formal analysis" from other methods of formal criticism. He names two other types: "genre criticism", in which a critic defines and classifies structural elements of a literary work, and "practical criticism", in which a critic interprets a work without invoking traits external to the work. Goodman's "inductive formal analysis" method is meant to balance the two by studying the parts of a work and deriving definitions that can be used across works, i.e. how the parts interrelate to form a whole. He puts particular emphasis on
narrative plot, or the elements that continue or change during the work. Throughout the book, he applies his formal analysis to examples of literary works organized by Aristotelian abstract genres: "serious plots", "comic plots", "novelistic plots", "considerations of
diction", and "special problems of unity". The next three chapters describe literary works in three plot types: serious, comic, and novelistic. These types extend from the typology in Aristotle's
Poetics. Goodman begins by using two plays by
Sophocles—
Oedipus Rex and
Philoctetes—to distinguish Aristotle's method from Goodman's own. He argues that Aristotle's method is modelled on the formal structure of
Oedipus Rex and that this structure is inadequate to apply to
Philoctetes. Instead, in Goodman's "serious plot" typology, the characters are intertwined with and indistinguishable from the plot, such as in
Shakespeare's play
Richard II and
Virgil's epic poem, the
Aeneid. Characters in Goodman's "comic plots" are further removed from the plot so the reader is less affected by the character's destruction, such as
Ben Jonson's play
The Alchemist. He also describes Shakespeare's
Henry IV, Part 1 and
John Dryden's verse satire
Mac Flecknoe as a mix of comic and serious plots. In "novelistic plots", the characters respond to rather than identify with the plot, with examples including
Gustav Flaubert's novel
Sentimental Education,
Franz Kafka's novel
The Castle, and Shakespeare's
Hamlet. In the fifth chapter, Goodman analyzes
lyrical poems into elements such as feeling, reflection/thinking, image, and stylistic attitude. Although these elements appear in long-form works, Goodman contends that they are subordinate to larger structural elements like character, plot, and thesis in those works. He performs a close reading of
John Milton's "
On His Blindness" and
Lord Tennyson's "
Morte d'Arthur", with formal analysis of "texture" elements like word sound, weight,
syntax,
tone, and metaphor. He introduces six potential ways to relate
sonnet stanzas and what they infer. Goodman also analyzes the verse
Catullus 46. The sixth chapter addresses "special problems of unity", i.e., unique circumstances for when analysis extends beyond a single work, such as unifying the structure of a work's translation with its original. In the first of four examples, Goodman discusses how the heavy symbolism
Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "
The Minister's Black Veil" sublimates into
mystery. In the examples of a translation of
Baudelaire's sonnet "
La Géante" and
a film adaptation of
Eugène Labiche's play ''
Un Chapeau de Paille d'Italie'', Goodman notes how formal elements change within transformations of works, such that character, rhythm, syntax, theme, and other elements change from the original format. In the example of "La Géante", Goodman concludes that the sonnet and its translation differ in genre. He also cites
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's "The Builders" as a demonstration of a good poet's ability to write bad poems. Goodman ends with an analysis of
Pierre Corneille's 17th-century tragedy
Horace that uses his inductive formal method alongside other critical modes to highlight the play's psychology of war. He criticizes Corneille's decision to not portray the real atrocities of war. == Reception ==