Difference between revisions of "2020 The Historical Novel: Reconstructing the Past from Waverley to Wolf Hall"

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:*[https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2014/jul/07/sir-walter-scott-fiction Stuart Kelly, "Sir Walter Scott's Waverley at 200 is not yet old", ''The Guardian'' 7 Jul 2014]
 
:*[https://www.theguardian.com/books/booksblog/2014/jul/07/sir-walter-scott-fiction Stuart Kelly, "Sir Walter Scott's Waverley at 200 is not yet old", ''The Guardian'' 7 Jul 2014]
 
:*[https://www.theguardian.com/culture/gallery/2012/may/13/ten-best-historical-novels William Skidelsky, "The 10 Best Historical Novels", ''The Guardian'', 13 May 2012]
 
:*[https://www.theguardian.com/culture/gallery/2012/may/13/ten-best-historical-novels William Skidelsky, "The 10 Best Historical Novels", ''The Guardian'', 13 May 2012]
 +
*Task 1 (cf. Stud.IP)
  
 
===Session 2: 30 April 2020: Formal and Functional Analysis of ''Wolf Hall''===
 
===Session 2: 30 April 2020: Formal and Functional Analysis of ''Wolf Hall''===
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*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/ang070_handout_Literature_and_representation_2017-18_final.pdf Literature & Representation]
 
*Handout: [https://uol.de/fileadmin/user_upload/anglistik/download/BM7/materials/handout_narratology_2018_10_12_2-seitig.pdf Narratology]
 
*Handout: [https://uol.de/fileadmin/user_upload/anglistik/download/BM7/materials/handout_narratology_2018_10_12_2-seitig.pdf Narratology]
 +
*Task 2 (cf. Stud.IP)
  
===Session 3: ===
+
===Session 3: 7 May 2020: Wolf Hall and Historiography===
*Topic:
+
*Topic: Historiography and Subjectivity
 
*Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, ''Wolf Hall'' (2009)
 
*Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, ''Wolf Hall'' (2009)
*Context:
+
*Secondary Reading: Johnston, Andrew James. "Hilary Mantel: The Thomas Cromwell Trilogy (2009- )." ''Handbook of the English Novel in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries.'' Ed.Christoph Reinfandt. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2017. 536-54.
*Secondary Reading:  
+
  
===Session 4: ===
+
===Session 4: 14 May 2020: Critical Perspectives on Wolf Hall===
 
*Topic:  
 
*Topic:  
 
*Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, ''Wolf Hall'' (2009)
 
*Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, ''Wolf Hall'' (2009)
*Context:  
+
*Context: NYRB review
*Secondary Reading:  
+
*Secondary Reading: choose one among
  
 
   [Hand in RPO #1 until session 5]
 
   [Hand in RPO #1 until session 5]
  
===Session 5: ===
+
===Session 5: 28 May 2020 ===
 
*Group Work / Theory and Methods I
 
*Group Work / Theory and Methods I
 
*de Groot, ''The Historical Novel'' (2010); read esp. xx-xx
 
*de Groot, ''The Historical Novel'' (2010); read esp. xx-xx
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*Secondary Reading:
 
*Secondary Reading:
  
===Session 11: ===
 
*Topic:
 
*Primary Literature: [third text]
 
*Context:
 
*Secondary Reading:
 
  
   [Hand in RPO #3 until session 12]
+
   [Hand in RPO #3 until session 11]
 
   
 
   
===Session 12: ===
+
===Session 11: ===
 
*Final Questions
 
*Final Questions
 
*evaluation
 
*evaluation
  
===Session 13: ===
+
===Session 12: ===
 
*hand in your chosen and revised RPO
 
*hand in your chosen and revised RPO
 
*feedback on evaluation
 
*feedback on evaluation

Revision as of 21:22, 30 April 2020

  • Course: 3.02.141
  • Time: Thursday 10-12h
  • Venue: A01 0-010 b / online
  • Course Description: The beginning of this summer term also marks the publication of Hilary Mantel's The Mirror & the Light, the third part in the Wolf Hall trilogy. With these bestselling and critically acclaimed titles, two Booker Prize wins and a world-wide fan base, Mantel has been at the centre of (1) a debate linking current Brexit politics with the English Reformation and (2) a resurgence of the historical novel. In this course, we will trace the beginnings and developments of the genre (from Waverly [1814] to Wolf Hall [2009]), its reconstructions of historical characters and settings (via a constructivist, New Historicist, postmodernist lense), as well as the scholarly contributions making sense of its appeal (from Lukacs to Borgmeier, Hutcheon, de Groot). Students are required to have read the two main novels and expand their experience with and knowledge of the genre by choosing a third novel (selection below) and studying secondary literature.

Please, buy and read the following novels:

  • Scott, Walter. Waverley; or, 'Tis Sixty Years Since. [1814] Ed. Claire Lamont. Oxford: OUP, 1998/2008/2015. (9780198716594)
  • Mantel, Hilary. Wolf Hall. [2009] London: Fourth Estate, 2010. (9780007230204)
  • as well as one of the following: [to be discussed]
  • Dickens, Charles. A Tale of Two Cities (1859) - preferably Penguin or Norton
  • Graves, Robert. I, Claudius (1934) - preferably Vintage
  • Fowles, John. The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969) - preferably Vintage
  • Barnes, Julian. Flaubert's Parrot (1984) - preferably Vintage
  • Morrison, Toni. Beloved (1987) - preferably xx
  • Byatt, A.S. Possession (1990) - preferably xx
  • Chevalier, Tracy. Remarkable Creatures (2009) - preferably --

PLEASE NOTE: All primary materials will be made available at the CvO bookshop. Should the semester be postponed due to current circumstances, please use the time to immerse yourself in the reading of the first two novels. 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.


Session 1: 23 April 2020: Introduction to the History of the Historical Novel

  • Welcome: Please read my message under 'Ankündigungen on Stud.IP'; familiarize yourself with the draft syllabus that you find here and note the course requirements for 6 KP:
  • (1) excerpts and textual analysis assignments (upload weekly to Stud.IP)
  • (2) three RPOs (1 per novel, 1 page each; upload to Stud.IP)
  • (3) one seminar paper (12-15 pp), based on the topic of one of your RPOs (upload to Stud.IP and hand in as print version by 15 Sept).
  • Historical fiction in academic discourse:
  • Keen, Suzanne. "The Historical Turn in British Fiction" (2006) - download via stud.ip
  • Historical fiction in public discourse:
  • Task 1 (cf. Stud.IP)

Session 2: 30 April 2020: Formal and Functional Analysis of Wolf Hall

  • We will meet on Stud.IP (go to our course --> 'meetings' --> no camera, mute microphone, we will add these as we proceed)
  • Topic: Textual Analysis (narration, focalization, character constellation, plot & story, themes & motifs)
  • Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall (2009)
  • Handout Literature & Representation
  • Handout: Narratology
  • Task 2 (cf. Stud.IP)

Session 3: 7 May 2020: Wolf Hall and Historiography

  • Topic: Historiography and Subjectivity
  • Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall (2009)
  • Secondary Reading: Johnston, Andrew James. "Hilary Mantel: The Thomas Cromwell Trilogy (2009- )." Handbook of the English Novel in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries. Ed.Christoph Reinfandt. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter, 2017. 536-54.

Session 4: 14 May 2020: Critical Perspectives on Wolf Hall

  • Topic:
  • Primary Literature: Hilary Mantel, Wolf Hall (2009)
  • Context: NYRB review
  • Secondary Reading: choose one among
  [Hand in RPO #1 until session 5]

Session 5: 28 May 2020

  • Group Work / Theory and Methods I
  • de Groot, The Historical Novel (2010); read esp. xx-xx

Session 6:

  • Topic: Textual Analysis
  • Primary Literature: Scott, Waverley
  • Context:
  • Secondary Reading:

Session 7:

  • Topic: Reconstructing Scottish History
  • Primary Literature: Scott, Waverley
  • Context: History and Theory
  • Secondary Reading: Trevor-Roper, Hugh. "The Invention of Tradition: The Highland Tradition of Scotland." The Invention of Tradition. Eds. Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1st. ed. 1983, repr. 2003. 15-42.

Session 8:

  • Topic: Reconstructing the History of the Historical Novel
  • Primary Literature: Scott, Waverley
  • Context: Genre
  • Secondary Reading: Borgmeier, Raimund. "Das Gattungsmodell: Sir Walter Scott, Waverley (1814)". Eds. Raimund Borgmeier and Bernhard Reitz. Der Historische Roman: 19. Jahrhundert. Heidelberg: Winter, 1984. 39-55.
  [Hand in RPO #2 until session 9]

Session 9:

  • Group Work / Theory and Methods I
  • Lukacs, The Historical Novel (1937/1983); read esp. xx-xx

Session 10:

  • Topic:
  • Primary Literature: [third text]
  • Context:
  • Secondary Reading:


  [Hand in RPO #3 until session 11]

Session 11:

  • Final Questions
  • evaluation

Session 12:

  • hand in your chosen and revised RPO
  • feedback on evaluation


  [Hand in research papers until 15 September 2020]

Tools

Primary Reading

Secondary Reading

(will be made available via Stud.IP, cf. also Handapparat)

  • Lukacs, Georg. The Historical Novel. [1937] Trans. Hanna and Stanley Mitchell. Introd. Frederic Jameson. Lincoln and London: U of Nebraska P, 1983.
  • Keen, Suzanne. "The Historical Turn in British Fiction" (2006)
  • de Groot, Jerome. The Historical Novel (2010)
  • Trevor-Roper, Hugh. "The Invention of Tradition: The Highland Tradition of Scotland." The Invention of Tradition. Eds. Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1st. ed. 1983, repr. 2003. 15-42.
  • Borgmeier, Raimund. "Das Gattungsmodell: Sir Walter Scott, Waverley (1814)". Eds. Raimund Borgmeier and Bernhard Reitz. Der Historische Roman: 19. Jahrhundert. Heidelberg: Winter, 1984. 39-55.
  • Keen, Suzanne. "The Historical Turn in British Fiction" (2006)

Further Reading

cf. Stud.IP/Dateien

Quotes

Links