Delivery Type | Delivery length / details |
---|---|
Seminars / Tutorials | 10 x 2 hour seminars |
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | 1 X 2,500 WORD ESSAY | 60% |
Semester Assessment | 30 MINUTE GROUP SUMMATIVE ORAL PRESENTATION | 40% |
Supplementary Assessment | Resubmit or resit failed elements and/or make good any missing elements. | 60% |
Supplementary Assessment | In the event of failure in the oral presentation, a 15 MINUTE SCRIPT ON A NEW TOPIC WITH ACCOMPANYING VISUALS, written as if for delivery, to be submitted | 40% |
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
Demonstrate a detailed knowledge of the set texts, and an informed awareness of their relationship to early modern magical and quasi-scientific discourses.
Articulate this knowledge and awareness in the form of a reasoned critical analysis of particular texts.
Relate the texts studied to early modern debates about society, politics, and religion, and show how magical and quasi-scientific discourses reflect and engage in these debates.
Explain and engage with relevant aspects of recent critical and/or theoretical debates about the texts studied.
Articulate some of their findings in the form of an oral presentation.
This module complements and extends the study of the cultural, social, and historical contexts of Renaissance literature undertaken in the second-year core module Medieval and Renaissance Writing. It also complements a number of Level 2 and Level 3 modules, including Arthurian Literature, Shakespeare and Jonson, and Renaissance Women and Writing.
Literary texts of the English Renaissance betray the strong influence of magical and quasi-scientific discourses. This module looks at the rich and diverse relationship between Renaissance literary texts and the discourses of magic across a range of genres, including drama, poetry, masques, and prose. In two introductory seminars, the significance of magic in Renaissance society and culture are explored, and theological and political responses to magic and the figure of the magus are examined. In succeeding weeks, four broad categories of magical knowledge and practice - fairy lore, witchcraft, alchemy, and natural philosophy - are considered. Each seminar explores the ways in which these discourses function in the presentation of literary creativity, authorship, and narrative and generic structures in the specified text or texts. The presentation of magical discourses in these texts is interpreted within appropriate historical contexts, and students are encouraged to identify the ways in which magic functioned as a vehicle through which contemporary social, religious, and political issues could be examined and contested. In the final two seminars, concerning natural philosophy, the emergence of scientific discourse and the 'decline' of magic in the first half of the seventeenth century is considered and questioned.
Skills Type | Skills details |
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Communication | oral communication through group discussions and presentations |
Improving own Learning and Performance | through independent reading and research |
Information Technology | through powerpoint presentations. |
Personal Development and Career planning | by critical self-reflection and through the development of transferable communication and research skills. |
Problem solving | by developing evaluative analysis and critical skills and by formulating and conducting a detailed argument |
Research skills | by relating literary texts to historical contexts and by synthesizing information in an evaluative argument |
Subject Specific Skills | Detailed critical/theoretical analysis of literary texts and evaluation of broad intellectual concepts. |
Team work | through group presentations |
This module is at CQFW Level 6