Skip navigation

ENGL8009 Texts and Contexts

Offered By School of Cultural Inquiry
Academic Career Graduate Coursework
Course Subject English
Offered in ENGL8009 will not be offered in 2012
Unit Value 12 units
Course Description

REVOLUTION AND ROMANTICISM

The late eighteenth century and early nineteenth centuries, the period identified with the Enlightenment and Romanticism and the American and French Revolutions, is a formative era for the modern world.  This course focuses on literary and cultural production in the period 1790-1825.  It will investigate issues such as how literary texts represent and participate in historical change; explore the relationship between polemical texts such as Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France and Paine's Rights of Man and the poetry, drama and fiction; consider the impact of a new politics of gender in emergent genres such as the Gothic, the politics of print culture in the period and the relationship between 'elite' and 'popular' cultures.

 

 

Learning Outcomes

By the end of the course you should be able to:

  1. Apply knowledge of the historical contexts of this period to specific texts studies.
  2. Identify key elements that are distinctive of literature of the Romantic period.
  3. Reflect, discuss and writing about what the literature of the Romantic period tells us about the society of the time.
  4. Develop your own critical thinking about impact of this period on the development of English literary history and how we view literature and the Romantic period today.
Indicative Assessment Essay (2500 words) 35%; Essay (4000 words) 55%; Research exercise (oral presentation plus handout to class) 10%
Workload 1 x 2 hour seminar per 13 weeks plus study time
Course Classification(s) AdvancedAdvanced courses are designed for students having reached 'first degree' level of assumed knowledge, which provide a deep understanding of contemporary issues; or 'second degree' and higher levels of knowledge; or for transition to research training programs.
Areas of Interest English
Prescribed Texts William Godwin, Caleb Williams (OUP), William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lyrical Ballads (Penguin), John Clare, Poems (Penguin) Maria Edgeworth, Castle Rackrent (OUP), Jane Austen, Persuasion (OUP) John Keats, Poems (Penguin), William Hazlitt, Selected Writings (OUP), plus material in 'brick'.
Preliminary Reading

 Texts and authors to be covered will include: Burke and Paine (selections), Godwin, Caleb Williams, Wordsworth and Coleridge, Lyrical Ballads, Lord George Byron, Selections from Don Juan, John Clare, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Pierce Egan's Life in London, John Keats, Poems and Letters, William Hazlitt, Selected Writings

Academic Contact Professor Gillian Russell

The information published on the Study at ANU 2012 website applies to the 2012 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2011 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions