Aims of the course:
- to read significant novels in the period 1860s-1920s and to understand their place in literary history, particularly the development of realism and modernism
- to develop skills in critical reading and literary analysis
- to become familiar with relevant critical terms, such as 'realism', 'modernism' and 'decadence'
Outcomes:
As a result of the course, within the constraints of the time available, students should be able to:
- show good knowledge of the texts, authors and period studied
- be familiar with contemporary reviews and subsequent critical debates about the texts
- understand some of the aspects of the development of the novel from realism to modernism, with reference to critical writing as well as the novels studied
- to have honed skills of close reading and critical interpretation
Course content overview:
This course covers a long historical period, from the full flowering of realism in Middlemarch to the 20th century shift into modernism with Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse. The course will move through five significant novels as examples of different modes of 19th/20th century writing. We will discuss how these works attempted to depict subjective experience as well as the external world as they experimented with the representation of consciousness itself.
Teaching weeks will cover contextual and biographical details of the novelists and will introduce students to the major critical debates surrounding their work. There will be three main themes to which the course will return to offer points of comparison and contrast between each week's reading: i) the development of the novel form through the 19th and into the early 20th century, innovations in style and structure ii) the novel's interest in the social and economic world of Britain and Europe iii) understandings of subjectivity and identity in the novel, as well as the representations of personal and familial relationships.
Students will be expected to read all the novels in full and lectures and discussions will be conducted on the basis that students are familiar with their content. Additional reading will also be provided in the form contemporary reviews and critical essays. Wider reading will be suggested for students who wish to pursue it.
Students are expected to have read and be familiar with the following five novels:
Great Expectations (1861) by Charles Dickens
Middlemarch (1874) by George Eliot
Tess of the D'Urbervilles (1891) by Thomas Hardy
Dracula (1897) by Bram Stoker
To the Lighthouse (1927) by Virginia Woolf
Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):
Orientation Week: 21-27 October 2019
Teaching Weeks: 28 October-1 December 2019
Feedback Week: 2-8 December 2019
A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.