Difference between revisions of "2007-08 BM1 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature, Part 1"

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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Course Outline.
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Course Outline.
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 1]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 1|Session 1]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|2
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|2
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— Different views on the periodization of literature.
 
— Different views on the periodization of literature.
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Salmon, ''The London almanack for the year of our Lord 1694'' (1694). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=9275867&FILE=../session/1188741289_12968&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=42583&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPHA&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= EEBO]<hr>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Salmon, ''The London almanack for the year of our Lord 1694'' (1694). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=9275867&FILE=../session/1188741289_12968&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=42583&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPHA&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= EEBO]<hr>
Goldsmith, John, Goldsmith, ''An almanack for the year of our Lord God, M.DCCC.'' (1800). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0658000300&SU=All&c=5&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateDescend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW125523034&b0=almanack&tiPG=1 ECCO].  
+
John Goldsmith, ''An almanack for the year of our Lord God, M.DCCC.'' (1800). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0658000300&SU=All&c=5&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateDescend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW125523034&b0=almanack&tiPG=1 ECCO].
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 2]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 2|Session 2]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|3
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|3
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|The Rise of Literature, Part I<br>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|The Rise of Literature, Part I<br>
 
&mdash; What the term literature meant in Defoe's days and how our modern meaning of the word developed.
 
&mdash; What the term literature meant in Defoe's days and how our modern meaning of the word developed.
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|''Memoirs of Literature containing a weekly account of the state of learning'' (1711). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=1293000201&SU=All&c=6&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=Author&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW117345912&b0=memoirs+of+literature&tiPG=1 ECCO]<hr>
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|''The modern dictionary of arts and sciences; or, complete system of literature'' (1774).
''The modern dictionary of arts and sciences; or, complete system of literature'' (1774). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0393700301&SU=All&c=1&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW112248153&b0=modern+dictionary+of+the+arts+and+sciences&tiPG=1 ECCO]
+
[http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0393700301&SU=All&c=1&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW112248153&b0=modern+dictionary+of+the+arts+and+sciences&tiPG=1 ECCO]<hr>
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 3]]
+
Pat Rogers (ed.). ''The Oxford Illustrated History of English Literature'' (1986)
 +
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 3|Session 3]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|4
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|4
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|The Rise of Literature, Part II<br>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|The Rise of Literature, Part II<br>
 
&mdash; The complex discourse about literature: literary histories, national philologies and an exchange supported by the media.
 
&mdash; The complex discourse about literature: literary histories, national philologies and an exchange supported by the media.
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Pierre-Daniel Huet, ''The history of romances'' [1670] (1715 [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0143100500&SU=All&c=2&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW110602030&b0=huet&tiPG=1 ECCO], [[Pierre Daniel Huet, Traitté de l’origine des romans (1670)|Anglistik Oldenburg]]).<hr>
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Pierre-Daniel Huet, ''The history of romances'' [1670] (1715 [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0143100500&SU=All&c=2&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW110602030&b0=huet&tiPG=1 ECCO], [[Pierre Daniel Huet, Traitté de l'origine des romans (1670)|Anglistik Oldenburg]]).<hr>
 
Hippolyte Taine, ''Introduction to the History of English Literature'' (1863). [http://www.bartleby.com/39/46.html Bartleby]
 
Hippolyte Taine, ''Introduction to the History of English Literature'' (1863). [http://www.bartleby.com/39/46.html Bartleby]
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 4]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 4|Session 4]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|5
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|5
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Geoffrey Chaucer ''Canterbury Tales'' (1386-1400). [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-old?id=Cha2Can&images=images/modeng&data=/lv1/Archive/mideng-parsed&tag=public Virginia e-text] (you may try to read the [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-old?id=Cha2Can&images=images/modeng&data=/lv1/Archive/mideng-parsed&tag=public&part=33&division=div1 Shipman's tale] with a [http://www.librarius.com/canttran/shiptale/shiptale001-019.htm translation into modern English])<hr>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Geoffrey Chaucer ''Canterbury Tales'' (1386-1400). [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-old?id=Cha2Can&images=images/modeng&data=/lv1/Archive/mideng-parsed&tag=public Virginia e-text] (you may try to read the [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-old?id=Cha2Can&images=images/modeng&data=/lv1/Archive/mideng-parsed&tag=public&part=33&division=div1 Shipman's tale] with a [http://www.librarius.com/canttran/shiptale/shiptale001-019.htm translation into modern English])<hr>
 
Daniel Defoe, ''Robinson Crusoe'' (1719). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0653600100&SU=All&c=5&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW113746641&b0=Robinson+crusoe&tiPG=1 ECCO], [http://www.pierre-marteau.com/editions/1719-robinson-crusoe.html Marteau]
 
Daniel Defoe, ''Robinson Crusoe'' (1719). [http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/ECCO?vrsn=1.0&dd=0&locID=bis&b1=KE&srchtp=b&d1=0653600100&SU=All&c=5&ste=10&d4=0.33&stp=DateAscend&dc=tiPG&n=10&docNum=CW113746641&b0=Robinson+crusoe&tiPG=1 ECCO], [http://www.pierre-marteau.com/editions/1719-robinson-crusoe.html Marteau]
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 5]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 5|Session 5]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|6
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|6
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&mdash; The order of Fictions
 
&mdash; The order of Fictions
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|George Eliot, ''Middlemarch'' <!--Untertitel-->(1871/72). [http://www.19thnovels.com/middlemarch.php 19thNovels.com]
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|George Eliot, ''Middlemarch'' <!--Untertitel-->(1871/72). [http://www.19thnovels.com/middlemarch.php 19thNovels.com]
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 6]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 6|Session 6]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|7
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|7
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&mdash; The modern novel, a field of intense debate
 
&mdash; The modern novel, a field of intense debate
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Salman Rushdie, ''Satanic Verses'' (1988).
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Salman Rushdie, ''Satanic Verses'' (1988).
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 7]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 7|Session 7]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|8
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|8
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&mdash; From the middle ages to Shakespeare
 
&mdash; From the middle ages to Shakespeare
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Shakespeare, ''Hamlet'' (1603). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=99846524&FILE=../session/1188476924_15773&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=11497&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPH&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= EEBO], [http://www.pierre-marteau.com/editions/1603-hamlet.html Marteau]
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Shakespeare, ''Hamlet'' (1603). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=99846524&FILE=../session/1188476924_15773&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=11497&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPH&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= EEBO], [http://www.pierre-marteau.com/editions/1603-hamlet.html Marteau]
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 8]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 8|Session 8]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|9
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|9
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Congreve, ''The Country Wife'' (1675). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=12738515&FILE=../session/1188896327_12749&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=93051&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPHA&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= ECCO]<hr>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Congreve, ''The Country Wife'' (1675). [http://eebo.chadwyck.com/search/full_rec?SOURCE=pgimages.cfg&ACTION=ByID&ID=12738515&FILE=../session/1188896327_12749&SEARCHSCREEN=CITATIONS&VID=93051&PAGENO=1&ZOOM=&VIEWPORT=&SEARCHCONFIG=config.cfg&DISPLAY=ALPHA&HIGHLIGHT_KEYWORD= ECCO]<hr>
 
Edward Bond, ''Saved'' (1965)
 
Edward Bond, ''Saved'' (1965)
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 9]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 9|Session 9]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|10
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|10
Line 91: Line 92:
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Blake, ''Jerusalem'' (1804). [[William Blake, Jerusalem (1804)|Anglistik Wiki Oldenburg]]<hr>
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|William Blake, ''Jerusalem'' (1804). [[William Blake, Jerusalem (1804)|Anglistik Wiki Oldenburg]]<hr>
 
T. S. Eliot, ''The Waste Land'' (1922). [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Waste_Land Wikisource]
 
T. S. Eliot, ''The Waste Land'' (1922). [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Waste_Land Wikisource]
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 10]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 10|Session 10]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|11
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|11
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&mdash; What is literature? Different debates and different answers.
 
&mdash; What is literature? Different debates and different answers.
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 11]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 11|Session 11]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|12
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|12
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Written Test
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Written Test
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 12]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 12|Session 12]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|13
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|13
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|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Feedback on Test and Look Ahead
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|Feedback on Test and Look Ahead
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 13]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 13|Session 13]]
 
|-
 
|-
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|14
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="center"|14
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&mdash; Debate or field of learning?
 
&mdash; Debate or field of learning?
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
 
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 14]]
+
|bgcolor="#efefef" valign="top" align="left"|[[2007-08 BM1: Session 14|Session 14]]
 
|}
 
|}
 
</center>
 
</center>

Revision as of 16:59, 21 October 2007


Session Date Topic Reading Presentation
1 Oct. 23, 2007 Course Outline. Session 1
2 Oct. 30, 2007 The Invention of History

— Different views on the periodization of literature.

William Salmon, The London almanack for the year of our Lord 1694 (1694). EEBO

John Goldsmith, An almanack for the year of our Lord God, M.DCCC. (1800). ECCO.

Session 2
3 Nov. 6, 2007 The Rise of Literature, Part I

— What the term literature meant in Defoe's days and how our modern meaning of the word developed.

The modern dictionary of arts and sciences; or, complete system of literature (1774). ECCO

Pat Rogers (ed.). The Oxford Illustrated History of English Literature (1986)

Session 3
4 Nov. 13, 2007 The Rise of Literature, Part II

— The complex discourse about literature: literary histories, national philologies and an exchange supported by the media.

Pierre-Daniel Huet, The history of romances [1670] (1715 ECCO, Anglistik Oldenburg).

Hippolyte Taine, Introduction to the History of English Literature (1863). Bartleby

Session 4
5 Nov. 20, 2007 Epic Poetry, Dubious History and the Novel, Part I

— The "rise of the novel".

Geoffrey Chaucer Canterbury Tales (1386-1400). Virginia e-text (you may try to read the Shipman's tale with a translation into modern English)

Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe (1719). ECCO, Marteau

Session 5
6 Nov. 27, 2007 Epic Poetry, Dubious History and the Novel, Part II

— The order of Fictions

George Eliot, Middlemarch (1871/72). 19thNovels.com Session 6
7 Dec. 4, 2007 Epic Poetry, Dubious History and the Novel, Part III

— The modern novel, a field of intense debate

Salman Rushdie, Satanic Verses (1988). Session 7
8 Dec. 11, 2007 Drama, Part I

— From the middle ages to Shakespeare

William Shakespeare, Hamlet (1603). EEBO, Marteau Session 8
9 Dec. 18, 2007 Drama, Part II

— From the restoration to the present.

William Congreve, The Country Wife (1675). ECCO

Edward Bond, Saved (1965)

Session 9
10 Jan. 8, 2008 Poetry

— Once a broad field comprising epic, drama and smaller genres, today a subsection of literature.

William Blake, Jerusalem (1804). Anglistik Wiki Oldenburg

T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land (1922). Wikisource

Session 10
11 Jan. 15, 2008 Literary Theory, Part I

— What is literature? Different debates and different answers.

Session 11
12 Jan. 22, 2008 Written Test Session 12
13 Jan. 29, 2008 Feedback on Test and Look Ahead Session 13
14 Feb. 5, 2008 Literary Theory, Part II

— Debate or field of learning?

Session 14