| Course Content |
Expand+This short course takes the student on an illustrated and entertaining tour of English literature from the Anglo Saxon world of Alfred the Great to the modern world of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf’s poetic and daringly experimental novels. Each er...
Hide-This short course takes the student on an illustrated and entertaining tour of English literature from the Anglo Saxon world of Alfred the Great to the modern world of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf’s poetic and daringly experimental novels. Each era has its characteristic art, music, architecture, history, etc. and this course will enable the student to consider key literary works against such an illustrated cultural and historical background. Thus, for example, when considering the Romantic period the revolutionary works of Wordsworth and Coleridge will be put into context by reference to the French Revolution, the paintings of Constable and Turner, and the music of Beethoven. Students will be given selections of various pieces of literature to read for each lecture and this will enable them to discuss and assess the literature of different ages.
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| Subjects Taught |
Expand+This course will consist of eight lectures. The student will gain an overview of the different periods of English literature and their respective cultural backgrounds. He/she will come to appreciate (and be entertained by) key texts by some of litera...
Hide-This course will consist of eight lectures. The student will gain an overview of the different periods of English literature and their respective cultural backgrounds. He/she will come to appreciate (and be entertained by) key texts by some of literature’s greatest writers.
Lecture 1 Lords of the Rings The old English epic Beowulf reveals a world of elemental battles and a surprisingly sophisticated social world where kings were ring givers and where a heroic code defined a man’s worth. The treasures of Anglo Saxon art form a colourful background to the literature.
Lecture 2 ‘The Life so Short, the Craft so Long to Learn’. The Middle Ages is the era of great cathedral building and feudal order, of the ethereal music of Hildegard of Bingen and Bosch’s bizarre paintings of hell. Chaucer’s Cantebury Tales is one of the highlights of medieval literature, revealing the medieval world in all its colour and complexity as a procession of characters from all social ranks makes its way to Cantebury.
Lecture 3 Brave New World The Elizabethan Renaissance generated an age of geographical and scientific discovery together with a flowering of vivid, new drama (Marlowe, Shakespeare, Webster, Jonson, etc.) and stunningly original poetry (Wyatt, Spencer, Donne, etc.). The life and times of the Tudors form the backdrop to such an exciting era.
Lecture 4 Shakespeare: ‘All the world’s a stage’. Shakespeare’s plays – histories and comedies, romances and tragedies – reveal the full gamut of human nature, from the comical to the tragic, from the personal to the political, from brute nature to the ethereal. Elizabethan London forms a dramatic background to Shakespeare’s adventures, a world of bear baiting and plague, of low life and courtly sophistication.
Lecture 5 Gulliver’s Travels and the Age of Satire. ‘He lashed the vice but spared the name’. Swift and his contemporaries wrote the most incisive satires on human nature during an age where writers had patrons and their preoccupations were largely public and political.
Lecture 6 ‘Breaking the Silence of the Seas’. With the French Revolution came parallel revolutions in art, music and literature. Wordsworth and Coleridge, Keats, Shelley and Byron usher in a new romantic age of glittering and visionary poetry.
Lecture 7 The Rise of the Novel: From Wuthering Heights to Tess of the d’Urbervilles The novel became the leading literary genre in the Victorian era of imperialism and reform, as the works of Emily Bronte, Charles Dickens, Thomas Hardy and George Eliot bring the novel form to new heights.
Lecture 8 ‘About 1910 human nature changed’. Picasso, Stravinsky, Einstein created revolutions in art, music and science at the start of the 20th century while T S Eliot, Virginia Woolf and James Joyce did likewise for literature, heralding a new vision of human nature and reality.
Lectures will be of two hour duration and a bibliography will be given each week to guide students.
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