Module Identifier |
EN33720 |
Module Title |
POSTMODERN FICTIONS |
Academic Year |
2005/2006 |
Co-ordinator |
Professor Timothy S Woods |
Semester |
Intended for use in future years |
Next year offered |
N/A |
Next semester offered |
N/A |
Course delivery |
Seminars / Tutorials | Seminar. (10 x 2 hr seminar workshops) |
Assessment |
Assessment Type | Assessment Length/Details | Proportion |
Semester Assessment | Continuous Assessment: 2 essays (2,500 words each) | 100% |
Supplementary Assessment | Resubmit any failed elements and/or make good any missing elements. Where this involves re-submission of work, a new topic must be selected. | |
|
Learning outcomes
At the end of the module, students will be able to:
1. describe and appraise the main theories of and debates within postmodernism;
2. relate theories and practices of postmodernism to set texts;
3. describe the broad effects of postmodern devices on literary and cultural forms;
4. apply examples from the arguments of principal exponents of postmodern theory;
5. comment critically on the material chosen for study;
6. engage in coherent oral discussion of the texts and background material;
7. write about the subject in a well-structured and argued manner.
Brief description
Currently a buzz word, everything appears to be 'postmodern': the clothes you wear, the houses in which we live and the culture with which we engage. This option will focus on the theories and practices of postmodernism.
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To what does the 'post' refer?
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How is it (un)connected to modernism?
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What are the ramifications for literary practice?
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Framing the device, the death of the author, the destructible text, the unwriting of the text: what have we learned from such techniques?
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In what sense has self-reflexiveness made the writing of fiction more interesting and perhaps even more potent?
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To what extent have the interrogations of self-reflexivity liberated the novel from certain obsolete conventions?
The module will focus principally on literary examples of postmodernism, but attention will also be paid to other areas of cultural practice, such as film, visual art, and architecture. The seminar pattern will follow a series of thematic interests, which centre upon the characteristic features of postmodern practice, as well as considering some of the theoretical essays of the principal exponents of postmodern theory.
Content
PROGRAMME
Seminar 1: Theories of Postmodernism
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Fredric Jameson, Postmodernism, or The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism; J-F Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition; Jurgen Habermas, Modernity - An Incomplete Project
Seminar 2: Erasing Worlds?
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The Novel Undone: Thomas Pynchon, The Crying of Lot 49
Seminar 3: Deconstructing Fiction
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Paul Auster, The New York Trilogy
Seminar 4: Poetry in the Age of Electronic Reproduction
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Extracts from American 'L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E' Poets: Susan Howe, Lyn Hejinian, Ron Silliman, Bob Perelman, Charles Bernstein
Seminar 5: Desire, Simulacra, and Spectacles
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Angela Carter, The Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman
Seminar 6: Feminism/Postmodernism
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Joanna Russ, The Female Man
Seminar 7: Architecture and Urbanicity
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Charles Jencks, The Emergent Rules; Robert Venturi, The Duck and the Decorated Shed; Paolo Portoghesi, Postmodern
Seminar 8: Magic Realism
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Salman Rushdie, Midnight's Children
Seminar 9: Other Worlds
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William Gibson, Neuromancer
Seminar 10: Postmodern and Film
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Ridley Scott, Blade Runner; The Wachowski Brothers, The Matrix
Bibliographies
There is currently a vast proliferation of texts and studies of postmodernism and its various impacts upon spheres of our society. There is a good selection of the principal texts in the Hugh Owen Library (and this is well supplemented by texts in the National Library). Additional bibliographies concerning individual writers will be compiled and given to students on a weekly basis. The Hugh Owen Library has large holdings on most of the authors represented on this course (including writers not mentioned but nevertheless prominent in postmodern culture).
Reading Lists
Books
** Should Be Purchased
Thomas Docherty Postmodernism: A Reader
Harvester
Thomas Pynchon The Crying of Lot 49
Picador
Paul Auster The New York Trilogy
Faber and Faber
Angela Carter The Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman
Penguin
William Gibson Neuromancer
Grafton
Salman Rushdie Midnight's Children
Picador
Joanna Russ The Female Man
The Women's Press
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 6