Gwybodaeth Modiwlau

Module Identifier
WEM0120
Module Title
Comparative Celtic Literature
Academic Year
2025/2026
Co-ordinator
Semester
Semester 1
Exclusive (Any Acad Year)
Reading List
Other Staff

Course Delivery

 

Assessment

Assessment Type Assessment length / details Proportion
Semester Assessment Essay 1  2000 Words  40%
Semester Assessment Essay 2  3000 Words  60%
Supplementary Assessment Essay 2  3000 Words  60%
Supplementary Assessment Essay 1  2000 Words  40%

Learning Outcomes

On successful completion of this module students should be able to:

Demonstrate a specialist knowledge of the eighteenth- and nineteeenth-century background to the comparison of literatures in the various Celtic languages.

Engage in advanced critical evaluation of themes which appear in more than one of the Celtic literatures.

Demonstrate a specialist knowledge of various similarities between these literatures and engage in advanced critical evaluation of various explanations for their occurrence.​

Brief description

Comparative study of medieval and early modern literature in the Celtic languages and consideration of the traditional intellectual framework for this study (i.e. the existence of a peculiarly Celtic type of literature) and of problems with this, particularly taking into account the origins of this framework in the Romantic period. Students will read a range of texts in translation and consider the similarities and differences between the literatures of the different languages, and the possible reasons for these (common inheritance, mutual influence, external influences, coincidence and so on).

Content

A series of 10 lectures on different aspects (the history of the discipline, the influence of Romanticism, questions of borrowing from one language to another, the problem of conservatism, court poetry, old ideas about the development of Indo-European literature (prosimetrum and so on), debates in Ireland about ‘nativism’ etc.). Also 10 textual seminars to read and discuss relevant texts.

Module Skills

Skills Type Skills details
Application of Number
Communication The students will be expected to use clear and correct language both written and oral.
Improving own Learning and Performance The students will have to improve their work in response to constructive criticism from their tutors and fellow students.
Information Technology The students will be expected to use word processors and on-line resources where appropriate.
Personal Development and Career planning They will learn skills which are important in academic work.
Problem solving Problems arising from the work will be solved by students in seminars and in their written work.
Research skills Research skills will be an important part of completing assignments. Students will be expected to use on-line resources where appropriate.
Subject Specific Skills The ability to reason and to treat a range of sources critically.
Team work The students will have to discuss and respect the points of view of their fellow students.

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 7