2024-25 Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature
Please note: The ang070/ang071 module consists of
- a seminar (S/Ü "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature", offered in the current winter term),
- a lecture (VL "Introduction to Literary History and Textual Analysis", offered in the current winter term),
- a seminar (S/Ü "Key Concepts in Cultural Studies", offered in the following summer term), and
- a lecture (VL "Historical Background and Critical Concepts", offered in the following summer term).
All students beginning in the winter term 2024/25 need to enroll in the lecture VL "Introduction to Literary History and Textual Analysis", AND in a seminar S/Ü "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature" in ang070/ang071. Registration is via Stud.IP.
On this page you will find detailed information on the eleven courses of our seminar S/Ü "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature".
Lecture: VL "Introduction to Literary History and Textual Analysis"
VL "Introduction to Literary History and Textual Analysis" Course Outline "Introduction to Literary History and Textual Analysis" Seminars: S/Ü "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature"
S/Ü "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature" Course Outline "Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature" Revision: Ü "Repetitorium: Introduction to the Critical and Scholarly Discussion of Literature"
Ü "Revision Course" Course Outline "Revision Course" Tutorials: TUT "Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies I"
TUT "Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies I" Course Outline "Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies I" |
This seminar is part of the Basismodul ang070/ang071 and focuses on techniques of textual analysis in the context of discussing literature. We are offering nine parallel courses. Please make sure that you are registered under ONE of these in Stud.IP.
All parallel courses have a common structure. The texts for our courses will come from a common pool, though each course may focus on different text passages.
The "analytical tools" presented on the handouts will be discussed at the beginning of each meeting and then applied to the texts. The additional reading on which the handouts are based is not obligatory, and it can be done either before or after each session.
Both the texts and the other materials will be made accessible to you electronically (cf. the links below). In addition you will need to purchase two books:
- Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night's Dream. Ed. Sukanta Chaudhuri. The Arden Shakespeare, third series. London: Bloomsbury, 2017. Print. [ISBN: 978-1408133491]
- Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Other Tales. Ed. Roger Luckhurst. Oxford: OUP, 2008. Print. [ISBN: 978-0199536221], read Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde only
Course work: You will be asked to write three ungraded exercise assignments (analysing poetry, drama, and fiction, respectively, max. 3 pages each; and composing a short bibliography, max. 1 page each), take a test about relevant content from the lecture series, and produce a research paper outline and a problem-oriented sample analysis of a relevant passage (RPO+, due on February 28). Both the outline and the sample analysis are preparatory steps for the research papers you will be asked to produce in future seminars. For this RPO+ you will need to find your own topic to work on, document the preliminary work (this includes finding an appropriate title, writing a paragraph on the state of the art of your problem and one that describes your problem and your goal, and presenting a tentative table of contents as well as a short bibliography) and write up a formal and genre-specific analysis of a passage that fits in with the research question and thesis statement put forward in your RPO. All assignments are to be formatted according to the style sheet.
Three useful links for all assignments:
- Style Sheet
- Useful Hints for Assignments
- Literary Studies:Writing academic texts - esp. for the research paper outline
- General Reading List: British and Anglophone Literatures
Contents
- 1 Session One, October 16/17/18: Introduction
- 2 Session Two, October 23/24/25: Analysing Poetry I: Poetic Conventions, Rhyme and Metre
- 3 October 30: Reading Week
- 4 October 31: No Session
- 5 November 01: Reading Week
- 6 Session Three, November 06/07/08: Analysing Poetry II: Figurative Speech
- 7 Session Four, November 13/14/15: Analysing Drama I: Rhetoric
- 8 Session Five, November 20/21/22: Analysing Drama II: Dramatic Communication and Plot Structure
- 9 Session Six, November 27/28/29: Analysing Drama III: Characterisation
- 10 Session Seven, December 04/05/06: Critical Debate and Literary Theory I
- 11 Session Eight, December 11/12/13: Analysing Fiction I: Narration and Focalisation
- 12 Session Nine, December 18/19/20: Analysing Fiction II: Characterisation
- 13 Session Ten, January 08/09/10: Analysing Fiction III: From Close Reading to Problem-Oriented Textual Analysis
- 14 Session Eleven, January 15/16/17: Critical Debate and Literary Theory II
- 15 Session Twelve, January 22/23/24: Recap
- 16 Session Thirteen, January 29/30/31: RPO+ Projects
Session One, October 16/17/18: Introduction
Welcome
- Introduction to the ang071 Curriculum, Aims and Goals
- Introduction to the ang071 Course Outline
Analytical Tools
- Handout Literature & Representation
Texts
Skills and Activities
Preliminaries for seminar communication.
Session Two, October 23/24/25: Analysing Poetry I: Poetic Conventions, Rhyme and Metre
Analytical Tools
- Handout Analysing Poetry
- Sources: Culler 161-178; Ludwig, 31-33; Cambridge Companion to Literatures in English
Texts
Skills and Activities
Structural approach to poetry: communicative situation, themes, metrics and language. Acquire a basic checklist of what to look (first) for in a poem. Recapitulate the basics of metrics and rhyme patterns. Recognise the features of a particular genre and genre conventions: the sonnet.
October 30: Reading Week
October 31: No Session
November 01: Reading Week
Session Three, November 06/07/08: Analysing Poetry II: Figurative Speech
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Figurative Speech
- Sources: Ludwig, 47-60; Leech, 147-157
Texts
Skills and Activities
Figurative language, interplay. Spot metaphors, similes, etc. the metric pattern and valorise the points where it is broken. Reinforce basic checklist of previous week. Analyse particular features of poetic language (figures of speech, metrical effects).
Assignment I: Poetry
Sample Solution Assignment I: Poetry
Session Four, November 13/14/15: Analysing Drama I: Rhetoric
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Rhetoric
- Sources: Plett 3-22, 102-105
Texts
- Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Skills and Activities
A speech from the Shakespeare play
[Assignment I: Poetry - Due]
REGISTRATION PERIOD BEGINS
Session Five, November 20/21/22: Analysing Drama II: Dramatic Communication and Plot Structure
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Analysing Dramatic Communication
- Sources: Pfister 49 - 57, 86 - 94, 126 - 147
Texts
- Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Skills and Activities
Dramatic Structures and Communication; Exposition.
Session Six, November 27/28/29: Analysing Drama III: Characterisation
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Analysing Dramatic Communication
- Sources: Pfister 183 - 195
Texts
- Shakespeare, William. A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Skills and Activities
Characters and Genre Aspects.
[Assignment II: Drama]
[Sample solution assignment II: Drama]
Session Seven, December 04/05/06: Critical Debate and Literary Theory I
Material
- Handout: Editing Shakespeare
- Handout: Brief Overview of Theoretical Approaches and Movements
Texts
Skills and Activities
Theory and Critical Discussion. Secondary Material.
[Assignment II: Drama - Due]
Session Eight, December 11/12/13: Analysing Fiction I: Narration and Focalisation
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Narratology
- Sources: Rimmon-Kenan, Chapter 6, 72-86
Texts
- Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Skills and Activities
Narration, Focalization.
REGISTRATION PERIOD ENDS
Session Nine, December 18/19/20: Analysing Fiction II: Characterisation
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Narratology
- Sources: Rimmon-Kenan, Chapter 5, 59-71
Texts
- Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Skills and Activities
Characterisation.
Session Ten, January 08/09/10: Analysing Fiction III: From Close Reading to Problem-Oriented Textual Analysis
Analytical Tools
- Handout: Narratology
- Sources: Rimmon-Kenan, Chapter 5, 59-71 and Chapter 6, 72-86
Texts
- Stevenson, Robert Louis. Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Skills and Activities
Close Reading
[Assignment III: Fiction]
[Sample Solution Assignment III: Fiction]
Session Eleven, January 15/16/17: Critical Debate and Literary Theory II
Material
Texts
Homework
- Choose two passages from the novel that you would analyse in order to substantiate the argument of the secondary text.
- What kind of RPO+ would precede this kind of secondary text? While reading the text, deduce and reconstruct the parts relevant to an RPO+: (1) research problem, (2) thesis statement, (3) state of research, (4) argumentative structure.
Skills and Activities
Theory and Critical Discussion. Secondary Material.
Session Twelve, January 22/23/24: Recap
Assignments Poetry, Drama, Fiction
- Handout: Portfolio and Grading
- Handout: RPO+ (Annotations)
- Sample: RPO+
[Assignment III: Fiction - Due]
Session Thirteen, January 29/30/31: RPO+ Projects
Skills and Activities
Brief Report on 'Work in Progress': Your Term Paper Projects
- Handout: Portfolio and Grading
- Handout: RPO+ (Annotations)
- Sample: RPO+
[Assignment IV: RPO+ - due February 28]