Literature
is literally "acquaintance with letters" as in the
first sense given in the Oxford English Dictionary (from the
Latin littera meaning "an individual written character
(letter)"). The term has generally come to identify a
collection of texts or work of art, which in Western culture
are mainly prose, both fiction and non-fiction, drama and
poetry. In much, if not all of the world, texts can be oral
as well, and include such genres as epic, legend, myth, ballad,
plus other forms of oral poetry, and the folktale.
Nations can have literatures, as can corporations, philosophical
schools or historical periods. Popular belief commonly holds
that the literature of a nation, for example, comprises the
collection of texts which make it a whole nation.
The Hebrew Bible, Persian Shahnama, the Indian Mahabharata,
Ramayana and Thirukural, the Iliad and the Odyssey, Beowulf,
and the Constitution of the United States, all fall within
this definition of a kind of literature.