Module Identifier EN36520  
Module Title HYPERTEXT AND TWENTIETH CENTURY LITERARY STUDIES  
Academic Year 2000/2001  
Co-ordinator Dr Timothy Woods  
Semester Intended For Use In Future Years  
Next year offered N/A  
Next semester offered N/A  
Pre-Requisite Students will be expected to present evidence of interest in computer skills, e.g. development of their own webpage, prior to signing up.  
Course delivery Seminar   20 Hours 10 x 2 hour workshop seminars in a computer based room  
Assessment Essay   1 x 1500-2000 word essay   30%  
  Project work   1 webpage project of 4000-6000 word length (and images) made accessible over the WWW, not necessarily one page.   70%  
  Resit assessment   1 x 1500-2000 word essay - this will form 30% of the final module mark. 1 webpage project of 4000-6000 word length (and images) made accessible over the WWW, not necessarily one page - his will form 70% of the module mark.    
  Resit assessment   Resubmit any failed elements and/or make good any missing elements.    

Brief description
This option will seek to link twentieth-century literary studies with information skills, offering students an opportunity to pursue an academic project within the context of learning, developing and ultimately constructing, web pages. The sorts of projects that might be envisaged here are databases on a particular literary project (i.e. the thirties generation), a particular movement (i.e. Imagism, Constructivism), particular authors (i.e. T.S. Eliot or Thomas Pynchon), or a cultural study of a particular period/decade/genre/city (i.e. New York, London), or it may be an edited version of a particular text(s) (i.e. 'The Waste Land', several poems by a First World War poet). Another approach might be to compile a database of the web resource on a particular subject, author, etc., which might be compared with written resources, which in turn might serve a useful source of information for future students. Innovative approaches to particular problems, interesting links, attractive designs for web pages and helpful guides to readers, will be considered as significant to the final assessment as the substantiveness of the academic content and the nature of the information that is imparted on the project's site.

Module objectives / Learning outcomes
This module will offer ways in which various forms of information technology can be integrated with the teaching of literary studies. It will result in a body of databases which, when loaded up onto the web, may be useful twentieth-century literary resources for future students: a slowly gathering corpus of useful web items composed and designed by undergraduates which may, in themselves, become models for future students to build upon.
The module will involve some theoretical work on the implications of the new technolgoy for the ways in which we read and write, as well as the ways in which we conceptualise data. It will encourage students to think more closely about the functional units of text - what is a text; what are the relevant links between texts? to encourage students to think more carefully and emphatically about the nature of structure and the presentation of connecting data; to make visible and explicit mental processes that have always been part of the total reading experience; to make for a more reader-centred encounter with and experience of texts as part of a network of navigable paths and relations; to learn nonsequential reading practices, characteristic of more advanced study, and the integration of scattered evidence into a more complex intellectual structure.
To graudally increase the competence and confidence of students in the exploration of innovative uses of computers and IT in the learning and teaching process.

On completion of this module students should be able to:
demonstrate they have acquired a knowledge and understanding of the texts on the module and a critical awareness of the broader issues raised by the module
discuss the texts coherently and write about them in a well-argued and well-structured way
construct and design a website which would be accessible to users of the world wide web
assess the website constructed and designed by other students on the module

Reading Lists
Books
** Recommended Text
Paul Delany and George Landow (eds.). (1991) Hypertext, Hypermedia and Literary Studies: The State of The Art, In: Hypermedia and Literary Studies. MIT Press
George Landow in Delany and Landwo, eds.. (1999) The Rhetoric of Hypermedia: Some Rules for Authors. MIT