Difference between revisions of "2017-18 AM Time Travel: The 'Chronology Paradox' in 19C and 20C Literature"

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*'''NEW Time:''' Tue, 14:00-16:00
 
*'''NEW Time:''' Tue, 14:00-16:00
 
*'''NEW Venue:''' A6 0-001
 
*'''NEW Venue:''' A6 0-001
Line 9: Line 7:
 
*'''Course Description''':  
 
*'''Course Description''':  
  
This course consists of two parts: a theoretical and a historical overview of time travel and its literary representations.
+
How do literary texts reconcile the “central obstacle[s]” in physical science with “the temporal freedom of narrative time” (James and Bauer 2017)? In this course, we will explore the possibilities of (literary) time travel in two parts. At first, we will learn about the theory of time travel based, on the one hand, on classic SF stories from 20C writers from both sides of the Atlantic, such as Robert A. Heinlein, Ray Bradbury and Ursula K. LeGuin, and, on the other, on scientific and scholarly papers about the science and philosophy of time, chronology, causality and the paradoxes involved in digressions from and variations of these concepts. In the second part of our course, we will go back in time to read two 19C examples of time travel: H.G. Wells's ''The Time Machine'' (1895) and Charles Dickens's ''A Christmas Carol'' (1843). In addition, students will be asked to get acquainted with time travel texts included in ''The Time Traveler's Almanac'' (eds. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer, 2013) and become experts on one of these.
 
+
At first, we will learn about the theory of time travel based on a reading of classic SF short stories from 20C writers such as Robert A. Heinlein, Ray Bradbury and Ursula K. LeGuin, as well as scientific and scholarly papers on the science and philosophy of time, chronology, linearity and the paradoxes involved in digressions from and variations of these concepts.
+
 
+
In the second part of our course, we will go back in time to read our two main, though very different examples of time travel: H.G. Wells's The Time Machine (1895) and Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol (1843).  
+
 
+
 
+
Please, make sure to purchase the following three books in advance. Your reading of the first two is prerequisite to the course. The third book will be used in chunks and can be perused at leisure.
+
 
+
#H.G. Wells, The Time Machine
+
#Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
+
#Ann and Jeff VanderMere, The Time Traveler's Almanac  
+
  
 
PLEASE NOTE: All primary materials will be made available at the CvO bookshop.  
 
PLEASE NOTE: All primary materials will be made available at the CvO bookshop.  
Line 30: Line 17:
 
:*As part of the "Aktive Teilnahme" regulation:  
 
:*As part of the "Aktive Teilnahme" regulation:  
 
     Die aktive Teilnahme besteht aus folgenden Komponenten
 
     Die aktive Teilnahme besteht aus folgenden Komponenten
     - regelmäßige Anwesenheit: max. 2 Abwesenheiten und gegebenenfalls Nacharbeit
+
     - regelmäßige Anwesenheit: max. 3 Abwesenheiten und gegebenenfalls Nacharbeit
 
     - Vor- und Nachbereitung des Seminarstoffs (Expertengruppen, Vorbereitung/Lektüre von Texten)  
 
     - Vor- und Nachbereitung des Seminarstoffs (Expertengruppen, Vorbereitung/Lektüre von Texten)  
 
     - Entwicklung einer wissenschaftlichen Fragestellung aus dem Problembereich des Seminars, durch:
 
     - Entwicklung einer wissenschaftlichen Fragestellung aus dem Problembereich des Seminars, durch:
       *Übernahme von Ergebnispräsentationen und  
+
       *Übernahme von Ergebnispräsentationen (Gruppenarbeit) und  
       *(nur falls Seminararbeit angestrebt, verschriftlicht, ansonsten als Teil der Präsentation)  
+
       *(falls HA schriftlich, falls P+Ausarbeitung mündlich als Teil der Präsentation)
         Entwicklung einer Research Paper Outline im Laufe des Semesters (die Zeitangaben verstehen sich als Empfehlungen):  
+
         Entwicklung einer Research Paper Outline im Laufe des Semesters:  
         Wahl eines Themenbereichs (bis 25.April),
+
         Wahl eines Themenbereichs (bis letzte Sitzung vor Weihnachten),
         Abstract mit Fragestellung inkl. Forschungsbibliographie (RPO) (bis ###),  
+
         Abstract mit Fragestellung inkl. Forschungsbibliographie (RPO) (bis 26.Jan),  
         Vorstellung der Fragestellung in der letzten Semestersitzung.
+
         Vorstellung der Fragestellung (letzte Semestersitzung).
  
  
===Session 1: 19.10.2017===
+
===Session 1: 17.10.2017===
*Introduction
+
*Course syllabus, requirements, etc.
*Course syllabus
+
*Introduction: "time travel" and its discursive settings
  
 +
===Session 2: 24.10.2017===
 +
*VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
 +
*Reading and Group Work
  
===Session 2: 26.10.2017===
+
===Session 3: 31.10.2017 - REFORMATIONSTAG===
*Historical and Theoretical Contexts
+
  
 +
===Session 4: 07.11.2017===
 +
*Robert A. Heinlein, "All You Zombies" (1959)
 +
*Robert A. Heinlein, "By His Bootstraps" (1941)
 +
*Textual Analysis and Close Reading
  
===Session 3: 02.11.2017===
+
===Session 5: 14.11.2017===
*Textual Analysis 1:
+
*Presentation: Time Travel Paradoxes
*Close Reading:  
+
*Secondary Reading: Lewis, "The Paradoxes of Time Travel" (1976)
 +
*Presentation: Time Travel and Narrative
 +
*Secondary Reading: Slusser and Chatelelain, "Spacetime Geometries" (1995)
 +
*Further Reading: Wittenberg (2013), Ricoeur (1980)
  
===Session 4: 09.11.2017===
+
===Session 6: 21.11.2017===
*Textual Analysis 2:
+
*H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
*Close Reading
+
*Textual Analysis and Close Reading
  
===Session 5: 16.11.2017===
+
===Session 7: 28.11.2017===
*Textual Analysis 3:  
+
*H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
*Close Readings
+
*The many versions of The Time Machine
 +
*Secondary Reading: Stephen Arata, "A Note on the Text" in the Norton edition (ix-x)
 +
*Further Reading: Bergonzi, "The Time Machine: An Ironic Myth" (1976)
  
===Session 6: 23.11.2017===
+
===Session 8: 05.12.2017===
 +
*H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
 +
*The Time Machine in cultural context
 +
*Secondary Reading: Gomel, "Shapes of the Past and the Future: Darwin and the Narratology of Time Travel" (2009)
  
*Class reading:  
+
===Session 9: 12.12.2017===
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (1843)
*Further reading:
+
*Textual Analysis and Close Reading
  
 +
===Session 10: 19.12.2017===
 +
*Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (1843)
 +
*Presentation: Ghosts and other means of time travel prior to The Time Machine
 +
*Secondary Reading: "time travel" in the online Encyclopaedia of SF: http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/time_travel
 +
*Further Reading: chapter two from James Gleick, ''Time Travel: A History'' (2016; cf. 'Handapparat'); Jesse Matz, "The Art of Time, Theory to Practice" (2011)
  
===Session 7: 30.11.2017===
+
===Session 11: 09.01.2018===
 +
*VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
 +
*Presentation: Time Travel and/as Genre
 +
*Reading: VanderMeer and VanderMeer, "Introduction", The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
  
*Class reading:  
+
===Session 12: 16.01.2018===
*Presenters' reading:  
+
*Ray Bradbury, "A Sound of Thunder" [1952] in: VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
*Further reading:  
+
*Presentation: The Butterfly Effect in Time Travel Fiction: Ray Bradbury's "A Sound of Thunder"
 +
*Further Reading:
 +
:*[http://aapt.scitation.org/doi/pdf/10.1119/1.1636492 Robert C. Hilborn, "Sea gulls, butterflies, and grasshoppers: A brief history of the butterfly effect in nonlinear dynamics", American Journal of Physics 72.4 (2004): 425-427.]
 +
:*[http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/1080569906294445 "Editorial: The Butterfly Effect." Business Communication Quarterly 69.4 (December 2006): 369-373.]
 +
:*[http://archive.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2008/06/08/the_meaning_of_the_butterfly/?page=full# Dizikes, Petyer. "The meaning of the butterfly". The Boston Globe. (8 June 2008)]
 +
:*[https://rjlipton.wordpress.com/2011/02/21/butterflies-and-complexity-theories/ rjlipton, "Butterflies And Complexity Theories." Gödel's Lost Letter and P=NP (21 Feb 2011)]
 +
:*[https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/dreams-of-ray-bradbury-ten-predictions-that-came-true/2012/06/06/gJQAqbs9IV_story.html?utm_term=.625a2ea4943a Hayley Tsukayama, "Dreams of Ray Bradbury: Predictions that came true." The Washington Post (6 Jun 2012)]
 +
::*[https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-butterfly-effects-origin/2012/06/10/gJQAPb66SV_story.html?utm_term=.3a28f4b087ff "Letters to the Editor" (10 Jun 2012)]
 +
:*[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/07/books/ray-bradbury-who-made-science-fiction-respectable.html Michiko Kakutani, "Up from the Depths of Pulp and into the Mainstream." NYTimes.com (6 Jun 2012)]
 +
:*[https://www.geek.com/geek-culture/ray-bradbury-science-fiction-1494941/ Ray Walters, "Ray Bradbury’s legacy extends far past science fiction." Geek.com (7 June 2012)]
 +
:*[https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2012/06/ray-bradbury-believed-that-stories-could-change-lives/258192/ Joe Fassler, "Ray Bradbury Believed That Stories Could Change Lives." TheAtlantic.com (7 Jun 2012)]
 +
:*[http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/features/ray-bradbury-the-man-who-saw-into-the-future-7831947.html Kevin Rawlinson, "Ray Bradbury: The Man Who Saw into the Future." TheIndependent.com (8 Jun 2012)]
 +
:*[http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/evolution/Time-and-The-Physics-of-Ray-Bradbury--.html Faye Flam, "The Physics of Ray Bradbury's 'A Sound of Thunder'", PhillyDailyNews.com (15 Jun 2012)]
 +
:*[https://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/feb/10/alternative-history-butterfly-moments-reach-take-off-amazon-man-in-high-castle Adrian McKinty, "What if? Alternative history’s butterfly moments reach lift-off." TheGuardian.com (10 Feb 2015)]
  
 
+
===Session 13: 23.01.2018===
===Session 8: 07.12.2017===
+
*Workshop with Alena Cicholewski on "Moral Dimensions of Time Travel in ''A Christmas Carol'' (1843) and Octavia E. Butler's ''Kindred'' (1979)"
 
+
*Class reading:
+
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Further reading:
+
 
+
 
+
===Session 9: 14.12.2017===
+
*Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
+
*Class reading:
+
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Further reading:
+
 
+
===Session 10: 21.12.2017===
+
*Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
+
*Class reading:
+
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Further reading:
+
 
+
===Session 11: 11.01.2018===
+
 
+
*Class reading:
+
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Further reading:
+
 
+
 
+
===Session 12: 18.01.2018===
+
 
+
*Class reading:
+
*Presenters' reading:
+
*Further reading:
+
 
+
===Session 13: 25.01.2018===
+
 
*Final Discussion  
 
*Final Discussion  
 
*evaluation
 
*evaluation
  
   [Hand in RPOs until ### at the latest]
+
   [Hand in RPOs until 26 January at the latest]
  
===Session 14: 01.02.2018===
+
===Session 14: 30.01.2018===
*discussion of RPOs
+
*discussion of [[Ang070 - Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies - RPOplus|RPOs]]
 
*feedback on evaluation
 
*feedback on evaluation
  
   [Hand in research papers until 28 February]
+
   [Hand in research papers until 15 March]
  
 
==Materials==
 
==Materials==
  
===Bibliography===
+
===Tools===
 
+
*Handout [https://www.uni-oldenburg.de/fileadmin/user_upload/anglistik/download/BM7/materials/ang070_handout_Literature_and_representation_2017-18_final.pdf Literature & Representation]
 
+
*Handout: [https://www.uni-oldenburg.de/fileadmin/user_upload/anglistik/download/BM7/materials/handout_narratology-2seitig.pdf Narratology]
'''Tools'''
+
 
*Handout: [[Traditions in our discourse about literature]]
 
*Handout: [[Traditions in our discourse about literature]]
*Handout: [[Narratology]]
 
 
*Handout: [[(Non-)literary texts]]
 
*Handout: [[(Non-)literary texts]]
 
*Handout: [[Excerpt]]
 
*Handout: [[Excerpt]]
 
===Reviews===
 
 
  
 
===Further Reading===
 
===Further Reading===
 
+
*Lewis, David. (1976) "The Paradoxes of Time Travel." ''American Philosophical Quarterly'' (Apr): 145-152.
 
+
*Genette, Gérard.(1980) ''Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method''. Translated by Jane E. Lewin. Ithaca: Cornell UP.
===Quotes===
+
*Ricoeur, Paul. (1980) "Narrative Time." ''Critical Inquiry'' 7.1 (Autumn, Spec. Issue "On Narrative"): 169-190.
 
+
*Bakhtin, Mikhail. (1981) "Forms of Time and of the Chronotope in the Novel." ''The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays''. Ed. Michael Holquist. Translated by Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. Austin: U of Texas P. 84–258.
 +
*Slusser, George, and Danièle Chatelelain. (1995) "Spacetime Geometries: Time Travel and the Modern Geometrical Narrative." Science Fiction Studies 22.2 (Jul): 161-186.
 +
*Gomel, Elana. (2009) "Shapes of the Past and the Future: Darwin and the Narratology of Time Travel." ''Narrative'' 17.3 (Oct): 334-352.
 +
*Matz, Jesse. (2011) "The Art of Time, Theory to Practice." ''Narrative'' 19.3 (Oct): 283-294.
 +
*Wittenberg, David. (2013) ''Time Travel: The Popular Philosophy of Narrative''. New York: Fordham UP. 
 +
*Gleick, James. (2016) ''Time Travel: A History'' New York: Pantheon.
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
Line 145: Line 135:
 
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/timetrav/ Joel Hunter. "Time Travel." The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Web.]
 
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/timetrav/ Joel Hunter. "Time Travel." The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Web.]
 
*[http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/time_travel "Time Travel." The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Web.]
 
*[http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/time_travel "Time Travel." The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Web.]
 
+
*[http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150216-the-truth-about-movie-time-travel Quentin Cooper, "The Paradox of Popping Back in Time." BBC.com (16 Feb 2015)]
  
 
[[Category:Aufbaumodul]]
 
[[Category:Aufbaumodul]]
 
[[Category:WiSe 2017-18]]
 
[[Category:WiSe 2017-18]]

Latest revision as of 14:36, 22 January 2018

  • NEW Time: Tue, 14:00-16:00
  • NEW Venue: A6 0-001
  • Course: 3.02.151
  • Lecturer: Anna Auguscik
  • Modul: ang615 Motifs - Themes - Issues (and their Media)
  • Course Description:

How do literary texts reconcile the “central obstacle[s]” in physical science with “the temporal freedom of narrative time” (James and Bauer 2017)? In this course, we will explore the possibilities of (literary) time travel in two parts. At first, we will learn about the theory of time travel based, on the one hand, on classic SF stories from 20C writers from both sides of the Atlantic, such as Robert A. Heinlein, Ray Bradbury and Ursula K. LeGuin, and, on the other, on scientific and scholarly papers about the science and philosophy of time, chronology, causality and the paradoxes involved in digressions from and variations of these concepts. In the second part of our course, we will go back in time to read two 19C examples of time travel: H.G. Wells's The Time Machine (1895) and Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol (1843). In addition, students will be asked to get acquainted with time travel texts included in The Time Traveler's Almanac (eds. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer, 2013) and become experts on one of these.

PLEASE NOTE: All primary materials will be made available at the CvO bookshop.

  • Additional materials for preparation, as well as the detailed syllabus, will be made available here and/or on Stud.IP. There will be a Handapparat in our library.
  • Course Requirements
  • Requirements for 6 KP: regular attendance and a (oral/)written contribution in the form of either a presentation + written outline (10-12 pp) or seminar paper (15 pp), with based on the topic of the seminar.
  • As part of the "Aktive Teilnahme" regulation:
    Die aktive Teilnahme besteht aus folgenden Komponenten
    - regelmäßige Anwesenheit: max. 3 Abwesenheiten und gegebenenfalls Nacharbeit
    - Vor- und Nachbereitung des Seminarstoffs (Expertengruppen, Vorbereitung/Lektüre von Texten) 
    - Entwicklung einer wissenschaftlichen Fragestellung aus dem Problembereich des Seminars, durch:
      *Übernahme von Ergebnispräsentationen (Gruppenarbeit) und 
      *(falls HA schriftlich, falls P+Ausarbeitung mündlich als Teil der Präsentation)
       Entwicklung einer Research Paper Outline im Laufe des Semesters: 
       Wahl eines Themenbereichs (bis letzte Sitzung vor Weihnachten),
       Abstract mit Fragestellung inkl. Forschungsbibliographie (RPO) (bis 26.Jan), 
       Vorstellung der Fragestellung (letzte Semestersitzung).


Session 1: 17.10.2017

  • Course syllabus, requirements, etc.
  • Introduction: "time travel" and its discursive settings

Session 2: 24.10.2017

  • VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
  • Reading and Group Work

Session 3: 31.10.2017 - REFORMATIONSTAG

Session 4: 07.11.2017

  • Robert A. Heinlein, "All You Zombies" (1959)
  • Robert A. Heinlein, "By His Bootstraps" (1941)
  • Textual Analysis and Close Reading

Session 5: 14.11.2017

  • Presentation: Time Travel Paradoxes
  • Secondary Reading: Lewis, "The Paradoxes of Time Travel" (1976)
  • Presentation: Time Travel and Narrative
  • Secondary Reading: Slusser and Chatelelain, "Spacetime Geometries" (1995)
  • Further Reading: Wittenberg (2013), Ricoeur (1980)

Session 6: 21.11.2017

  • H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
  • Textual Analysis and Close Reading

Session 7: 28.11.2017

  • H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
  • The many versions of The Time Machine
  • Secondary Reading: Stephen Arata, "A Note on the Text" in the Norton edition (ix-x)
  • Further Reading: Bergonzi, "The Time Machine: An Ironic Myth" (1976)

Session 8: 05.12.2017

  • H.G. Wells, The Time Machine (1895)
  • The Time Machine in cultural context
  • Secondary Reading: Gomel, "Shapes of the Past and the Future: Darwin and the Narratology of Time Travel" (2009)

Session 9: 12.12.2017

  • Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (1843)
  • Textual Analysis and Close Reading

Session 10: 19.12.2017

  • Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol (1843)
  • Presentation: Ghosts and other means of time travel prior to The Time Machine
  • Secondary Reading: "time travel" in the online Encyclopaedia of SF: http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/time_travel
  • Further Reading: chapter two from James Gleick, Time Travel: A History (2016; cf. 'Handapparat'); Jesse Matz, "The Art of Time, Theory to Practice" (2011)

Session 11: 09.01.2018

  • VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
  • Presentation: Time Travel and/as Genre
  • Reading: VanderMeer and VanderMeer, "Introduction", The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)

Session 12: 16.01.2018

  • Ray Bradbury, "A Sound of Thunder" [1952] in: VanderMeer and VanderMeer, The Time Traveler's Almanac (2014)
  • Presentation: The Butterfly Effect in Time Travel Fiction: Ray Bradbury's "A Sound of Thunder"
  • Further Reading:

Session 13: 23.01.2018

  • Workshop with Alena Cicholewski on "Moral Dimensions of Time Travel in A Christmas Carol (1843) and Octavia E. Butler's Kindred (1979)"
  • Final Discussion
  • evaluation
  [Hand in RPOs until 26 January at the latest]

Session 14: 30.01.2018

  • discussion of RPOs
  • feedback on evaluation
  [Hand in research papers until 15 March]

Materials

Tools

Further Reading

  • Lewis, David. (1976) "The Paradoxes of Time Travel." American Philosophical Quarterly (Apr): 145-152.
  • Genette, Gérard.(1980) Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method. Translated by Jane E. Lewin. Ithaca: Cornell UP.
  • Ricoeur, Paul. (1980) "Narrative Time." Critical Inquiry 7.1 (Autumn, Spec. Issue "On Narrative"): 169-190.
  • Bakhtin, Mikhail. (1981) "Forms of Time and of the Chronotope in the Novel." The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays. Ed. Michael Holquist. Translated by Caryl Emerson and Michael Holquist. Austin: U of Texas P. 84–258.
  • Slusser, George, and Danièle Chatelelain. (1995) "Spacetime Geometries: Time Travel and the Modern Geometrical Narrative." Science Fiction Studies 22.2 (Jul): 161-186.
  • Gomel, Elana. (2009) "Shapes of the Past and the Future: Darwin and the Narratology of Time Travel." Narrative 17.3 (Oct): 334-352.
  • Matz, Jesse. (2011) "The Art of Time, Theory to Practice." Narrative 19.3 (Oct): 283-294.
  • Wittenberg, David. (2013) Time Travel: The Popular Philosophy of Narrative. New York: Fordham UP.
  • Gleick, James. (2016) Time Travel: A History New York: Pantheon.

Links