Module Identifier |
ENM7020 |
Module Title |
NEW THEORIES, NEW PRACTICES: DEVELOPMENTS IN LITERARY THEORY AND PRACTICE SINCE 1995 |
Academic Year |
2005/2006 |
Co-ordinator |
Professor Peter T Barry |
Semester |
Intended for use in future years |
Next year offered |
N/A |
Next semester offered |
N/A |
Course delivery |
Seminars / Tutorials | 5 weekly two-hour 'workshop' sessions |
Assessment |
Assessment Type | Assessment Length/Details | Proportion |
Semester Assessment | A WRITTEN ASSIGNMENT OF 5000 WORDS | 100% |
Supplementary Assessment | RESUBMISSION OF THE FAILED ELEMENT Resubmit any failed elements and/or make good any missing elements. Where this involves re-submission of work, a new topic must be selected. | 100% |
|
Learning outcomes
On completion of this module, students should be able to:
1. Identify key areas in literary theory since 1995 and discuss the causes and effects of some of the main shifts in interest since the high point of theory in the 1980s.
2. Demonstrate the ability to apply these recent developments to selected literary works.
3. Show that they have developed an area of personal specialism within this body of work.
Aims
Most students on the MA in Literary Studies have taken a basic literary module at undgraduate level, but the content of such courses mainly concerns the 'classic' theorists of the 1970s and 80s. This module introduces developments which have taken place since the mid 1990s .
Brief description
The module reflects the recent tendency for theory to become more specific and localised in range and application. It takes as its foci four areas of theoretical interest which have emerged since the heyday of poststructuralism in the 1980s and considers them in the context of a selection of relevant literary works. The first session will introduce developments in theory since 1995, and the remaining four will each focus on one specific area.
Content
Week 1: Introduction to developments in literary theory since 1995.
Week 2: Spectrality
Theory Text: Nicholas Royle, The Uncanny: an Introduction (MUP, 2003)
Literary Text: Ghost Stories of Henry James, ed. Martin Schofield (Wordsworth Classics)
Week 3: New Narratologies
Theory Text: An Introduction to Narratology, Susana Onega, ed (Longman, 1996)
Literary text: Henry James, as before
Week 4: Ecocriticism
Theory Text: The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism: ed. Laurence Coupe (EUP, 2000)
Literary Text: The Island Princess, John Fletcher (1621), (Nick Hern Books/RSC, 2002)
Week 5: New Aestheticism
Theory Text: The Radical Aesthetic, Isobel Armstrong (Blackwell, 2001)
Literary text: John Fletcher, as before.
Students will be asked to purchase the two literary texts. Copies of the theoretical texts will be on short-loan in the library, but students will be expected to have their own copies of the theory texts most relevant to the area selected for their assignment. The weekly set reading for seminar discussion will nominate specific chapters or sections of the theoretical works for detailed discussion.
Module Skills
Information Technology |
Only word processing |
Subject Specific Skills |
Evaluating the practical applications and implications of broad intellectual concepts. |
Reading Lists
Books
** Should Be Purchased
Martin Schofield (ed) Ghost Stories of Henry James
Wordsworth Classics
John Fletcher (2002) The Island Princess
Nick Hern Books/RSC
** Essential Reading
Nicholas Royle (2003) The Uncanny: an Introduction
Manchester: Manchester University Press
Susana Onega (ed) (1996) An Introduction to Narratology
Longman
Laurence Coupe (ed) (2000) The Green Studies Reader: from Romanticism to Ecocriticism
London: Routledge
Isobel Armstrong (2000) The Radical Aesthetic
Oxford: Blackwell
** Recommended Background
T. J. Lustig (1994) Henry James and the Ghostly
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Julian Wolfreys (2001) Victorian Hauntings: Spectrality, Gothic, and the Uncanny in Literature
London: Palgrave
Mieke Bal (1998) Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative
University of Toronto Press
Gerald Prince (2004) A Dictionary of Narratology (new edition)
University of Nebraska Press
Cheryll Glotfelty (1996) The Ecocriticism Reader: Landmarks in Literary Ecology
University of Georgia Press
Glen A. Love (2003) Practical Ecocriticism: Literature, Biology, and the Environment
University of Virginia Press
John J. Jophin and Simon Malpas (eds) (2003) The New Aestheticism
Manchester: Manchester University Press
James Soderholm (ed) (1997) Beauty and the Critic: Aestheticism in an Age of Cultural Studies
University of Alabama Press
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 7