Irish Literature and Culture. Code: ECTS Credits: 6. Degree Type Year Semester

Similar documents
Shakepeare and his Time. Code: ECTS Credits: 6. Degree Type Year Semester

Study (s) Degree Center Acad. Period G.Estudios Ingleses FACULTY OF PHILOLOGY 3 Second term

Modernism and Beyond

Level 4 Level 5 X Level 6 Level 7 Level 8 Mark the box to the right of the appropriate level with an X

Principal version published in the University of Innsbruck Bulletin of 4 June 2012, Issue 31, No. 314

German Associate Professor Lorna Sopcak (Chair, on leave spring 2016)

ISTANBUL YENİ YÜZYIL UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

The Renaissance: Desire in Poetry and Drama from Shakespeare to Milton

Minor Eighteen hours above ENG112 or 115 required.

SIBELIUS ACADEMY, UNIARTS. BACHELOR OF GLOBAL MUSIC 180 cr

COMPOSITION AND MUSIC THEORY Degree structure Index Course descriptions

ISTINYE UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE and LITERATURE COURSE DESCRIPTIONS

Level 4 Level 5 Level 6 x Level 7 Level 8 Mark the box to the right of the appropriate level with an X

MARIO VRBANČIĆ, ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR consultation hours Associate / Assistant. VESNA UKIĆ KOŠTA, PhD, SENIOR RESEARCH ASSISTANT

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century.

Humanities Learning Outcomes

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

1. Discuss the social, historical and cultural context of key art and design movements, theories and practices.

Old English Language and Literature

PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION FOR M.ST. IN FILM AESTHETICS. 1. Awarding institution/body University of Oxford. 2. Teaching institution University of Oxford

Master of Music (150 ECTS) ACCORDION, GUITAR AND KANTELE Degree structure Index Course descriptions. Bachelor of Music (180 ECTS)

COURSE DESCRIPTION. 3. Estimated time (hours per semester) of teaching / learning activities 3.1 No. hours per week 2 3.

DRAFT. Contemporary Irish Literature: Portrait of a People

Course Outcome B.A English Language and Literature

DEGREE IN ENGLISH STUDIES. SUBJECT CONTENTS.

available also as with Integrated Year Abroad Degrees Timetable clash means 2000 level English must be taken in First year to do this combination.

Early Music Degree structure Index Course descriptions

German and Comparative Literature

The degree yields validity for a post of a cantor in Finland's Evangelical-Lutheran church as long

Interdepartmental Learning Outcomes

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF IRELAND, DUBLIN MUSIC

HARP Bachelor of Music (180 ECTS) Master of Music (150 ECTS) Degree structure Index Course descriptions

Span 361 is a Baccalaureate Core course that fits both the Western Culture and Literature and Arts categories.

FOLK MUSIC BACHELOR OF MUSIC, MAJOR SUBJECT

Old English Language and Literature

DEPARTMENT OF M.A. ENGLISH Programme Specific Outcomes of M.A Programme of English Language & Literature

Programme Specification

Introduction to British and Irish Literature

Office hours: MW 2:00-3:00 and TTH 12:30-2:00 and by appointment Office Biddle 223C Phone ext. 7166

Module Offering for International Students Drama & Theatre Studies. Programme

INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH LITERATURE EBOOK

PERCUSSION Bachelor of Music (180 ECTS) Master of Music (150 ECTS) Degree structure Index Course descriptions

Approaches to teaching film

Vocal Pedagogy and Performance

THEATRE (THEA) Theatre (THEA) 1. THEA COSTUME AND PATTERN DRAFTING AND DRAPING FOR STAGE Short Title: PATTERN DRAFTING AND DRAPING

Colonnade Program Course Proposal: Explorations Category

DRAMA IN LONDON: ANCIENT, SHAKESPEAREAN, MODERN: Text and Performance

Associate of Applied Science Occupational Therapy Assistant. McLENNAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE

II. Course Learning Outcomes Course Outcome/Objective. Assessment Method. At the conclusion of this course, students should be able to:

Associate of Applied Science Physical Therapist Assistant. McLENNAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Definitive Programme Document: Creative Writing (Bachelor s with Honours)

Unofficial translation from the original Finnish document

Associate of Applied Science Occupational Therapy Assistant. McLENNAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE

VCASS MUSIC CURRICULUM HANDBOOK

Programme Specification

ESSEX COUNTY COLLEGE Humanities Division MUS 100 Music Appreciation Course Outline

Cultural Identity Studies

Cathedral Catholic High School Course Catalog

Robinson, Lennox, Lennox Robinson papers related to John Quinn

ENGLISH (ENGL) 101. Freshman Composition Critical Reading and Writing. 121H. Ancient Epic: Literature and Composition.

Outcome EN4-1A A student: responds to and composes texts for understanding, interpretation, critical analysis, imaginative expression and pleasure

Texts: The Spanish Tragedy by Thomas Kyd, Hamlet, by William Shakespeare,

FILM & TV DRAMA IN IRELAND COM FT 415

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG215 WORLD LITERATURE BEFORE Credit Hours. Presented by: Trish Loomis

Trinity College Faculty of Divinity in the Toronto School of Theology

Canons and Cults: Jane Austen s Fiction, Critical Discourse, and Popular Culture

Students who wish to read English Literature should have obtained at least one of the following:

I. ASCRC General Education Form V: Literary and Artistic Studies Dept/Program English/Literature Course # ENLT 219L

EASTERN ARIZONA COLLEGE Advanced Poetry Writing

UNIVERSITY OF SAN FRANCISCO PERFORMING ARTS DEPARTMENT MUSIC PROGRAM

CURRICULUM. Master of Music (Music Teacher) (cand. musicae) ARTISTIC DIRECTION, RHYTHMIC VOCAL MUSIC Aalborg. Effective as of 2015

F. Y. B. Com. (Compulsory English) Question Paper Format (Term End Exam)

B.A. II DC Semester III Course: Poetry VI Marks: 100 Paper Code: Title of the course: 20 th Century Poetry (1900 to 1970)

Study Center in Alicante, Spain

Bachelor i musik (BMus) / Bachelor of Music (BMus)

MYKOLAS ROMERIS UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF SOCIAL TECHNOLOGIES INSTITUTE OF PSYCHOLOGY

PIANO ACCOMPANIMENT OBJECTIVES OF THE TRAINING PROGRAMME ORGANISATION OF STUDIES

how to write the perfect essay for a scholarship

Theatre and Residual Culture

HIST 521/611WR: COLONIAL AMERICA

English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1

ILLINOIS VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE Course Syllabus for Music 1000

Music Theory. Degree Offered. Degree Requirements. Major Learning Outcomes MUSIC THEORY. Music Theory 1. Master of Music in Music Theory

Course MCW 600 Pedagogy of Creative Writing MCW 610 Textual Strategies MCW 630 Seminar in Fiction MCW 645 Seminar in Poetry

Associate of Applied Science Physical Therapist Assistant. McLENNAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE

The doctor of musical arts curriculum in conducting prepares students for careers in higher education and in the professional world.

Folk music. Unofficial translation from the original Finnish document. Master of music 150 cr 2.5-year degree programme

Humanities modules available for incoming exchange students,

Twentieth Century British Drama (Cambridge Contexts In Literature) By John Smart

Course Code ENG 2219 Notional hours 150 hours

THEATRE ARTS (THEA) Theatre Arts (THEA) 1

Eng 104: Introduction to Literature Fiction

Queens College City University of New York

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Music Theory IV

1. The Basic Elements of Music. 2. Ragtime. 3. Jazz. 4. Musical Theater. 5. Rock. 6. Folk Music. II. Course Learning Outcomes Course Learning Outcome

Subject teaching Designing and implementing English lessons Basic Concepts in English Language Teaching. PHF-engl-FD3.

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG216 WORLD LITERATURE: AFTER Credit Hours. Presented by: Trish Loomis

Vocal Arts, Opera, Opera Coaching and Collaborative Piano

200 level, and AHPH 202

Film and Television. Program Learning Outcomes. Certificate Program Certificate not applicable.

Transcription:

2018/2019 Irish Literature and Culture Code: 100235 ECTS Credits: 6 Degree Type Year Semester 2500245 English Studies OT 3 0 2500245 English Studies OT 4 0 Contact Name: Andrew Monnickendam Findlay Email: Andrew.Monnickendam@uab.cat Prerequisites Use of languages Principal working language: english (eng) Some groups entirely in English: Yes Some groups entirely in Catalan: No Some groups entirely in Spanish: No This course requires the student to have a basic knowledge of culture and society, departing from the knoweldge obtained in the relevant subject taught in the first year. This course requires the student to read thoroughly and with great attention to detail. Objectives and Contextualisation The principal object is to stimulate interest in Irish literature in particular and literature in general. Skills English Studies Critically assessing the scientific, literary and cultural production in the English language. Demonstrate a comprehension of the relationship between factors, processes and phenomena of linguistics, literature, history and culture, and explaining it. Develop critical thinking and reasoning and knowing how to communicate effectively both in your mother tongue and in other languages. Distinguish and contrast the various theoretical and methodological models applied to the study of the English language, its literature and its culture. Identify the main literary, cultural and historical currents in the English language. Produce clear and well structured and detailed texts in English about complex topics, displaying a correct use of the organisation, connection and cohesion of the text. Rewrite and organize information and arguments coming from several sources in English and presenting them in a coherent and summarised way. Students must be capable of communicating information, ideas, problems and solutions to both specialised and non-specialised audiences. Students must develop the necessary learning skills in order to undertake further training with a high degree of autonomy. Learning outcomes 1

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. Analysing and interpreting in an advanced level secondary texts about the contemporary English Applying appropriate secondary academic sources to text comments and argumentative essays about contemporary English Carrying out oral presentations using secondary academic sources in relation to the contemporary English Communicating in the studied language in oral and written form, properly using vocabulary and grammar. Comparing and relating in an advanced level various topics and texts of the contemporary English Comparing in an advanced level the methodologies of literary criticism applied to contemporary English Demonstrate a master of the specific methods of individual academic work that prepare the student for a postgraduate specialised education in the same or a different field of study. Describing in detail and in an academic way the nature and main traits of the contemporary English Distinguishing the main ideas from the secondary ones and summarising the contents of primary and secondary texts about contemporary English literature (United Kingdom, United States, and other territories). Drawing up academic essays of medium length, using secondary academic sources in relation to the contemporary English Effectively communicating and applying the argumentative and textual processes to formal and scientific texts. Explaining in detail and in an academic way the diachronic and synchronic evolution of the topics and texts of the contemporary English Localising secondary academic sources in the library or on the Internet related to the contemporary English Mastering the advanced knowledge and scientific methodologies related to linguistics, literature, history and culture that prepare the student for a postgraduate specialised education in the same or a different field of study. Students must be capable of comprehending advanced academic or professional texts in their own language or the another acquired in the degree. Students must be capable of precisely arguing ideas and opinions in their own language or another acquired in the degree. Students must reflect on and give their opinion about primary texts of the contemporary English Summarising the content of academic primary and secondary sources about contemporary English Content This course is an introduction to Irish literature of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. The course is divided into two halves. The first focuses on the work of two classic Anglo-Irish writers: the great Modernist, James Joyce, the playwright, John Millingron Synge, and the great poet, William Butler Yeats. Historically and socially, these writers and their works are located in the struggle for independence, the Easter Rising, the setting up of the Irish Free State (1922) and the ensuing Civil War (1922-3). The second half of the course will focus on three novels: Edna O'Brien's The Country Girls (1960), John McGahern's Amongst Women (1990), and Claire Kilroy's T he Devil I Know (2012). We will see to what extent the violent upheavals of the early decades cast a huge shadow over modern literary works as Ireland strives to come to terms with modernity. The possibility or impossibility of forgiveness and reconciliation, either between families or between north and south, becomes a central concern. We will also look briefly, time permitting, at Irish music and other cultural manifestations. A brief list of associated topics includes: The Abbey Theatre 2

The Irish artist The Catholic Church National identity Nationalism and internationalism The Troubles Gender Sexuality and repression Myth, archetypes and stereotypes Celtic tigers Primary Reading: Module 1 Module 2 J.M. Synge, The Playboy of the Western World and Other Plays (into Ann Saddlemyer). Oxford: Oxford World Classics, 1995. James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, (intro. Jeri Johnson). Oxford: Oxford World Classics, 2008. Selection of Yeats's poetry. Edna O'Brien, The Country Girls. London: Phoenix, 2007. John McGahern, Amongst Women. London: Faber, 2008. Claire Kilroy, The Devil I Know. London: Faber 2012. Methodology 1. 2. 3. 4. Reading Thinking Discussing Writing Activities Title Hours ECTS Learning outcomes Type: Supervised Classroom based activities 50 2 1, 5, 8, 3, 12, 4, 17 Supervised activities 25 1 1, 5, 8, 12, 10, 17 Type: Autonomous Student autonomy 50 2 1, 16, 6, 5, 15, 8, 12, 11, 4, 13, 17 Evaluation The subject is assessed in the following way: Participation in class and in the debates on the Virtual Campus, 20% 3

Exams/written work, 2 x 40% = 80% The subject uses continuous assessment - students must complete all items. Class attendance is compulsory. The level of written and spoken English will be taken into account. Plagiarism, of any sort, will lead to an automatic fail. The handing-in of at least one exercise will exclude the student from the possiblity of being qualified as No avaluable (not eligible for assessment) Reassessment comprises a two-hour exam covering the entirety of the course material. It is the Faculty, not the teacher, who will determine the date and time. Only students who have completed the continuous assessment items are allowed to opt for reassessment. Procedure for Reviewing Grades Awarded: on carrying out each evaluation acitivity, lecturers will inform students (on Moodle) of the procedures to be followed for reviewing all grades awarded, and the date on which such a review will take place. In addition, students must have obtained an overall grade of between 3.5 & 4.9. Reassessment takes the form of a global exam which includes material from both modules. It is assessed on a pass/fail basis only. The student who passes will be awarded a grade of 5. Consequently, reassessment cannot be used to improve your final mark. Participation (20%) cannot be reassessed. Evaluation activities Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning outcomes Participation 20% 22 0.88 8, 3, 12, 4, 17 Written assessment 80% 3 0.12 1, 2, 16, 6, 5, 15, 14, 7, 8, 9, 12, 11, 4, 13, 10, 17, 18 Bibliography ** = primary reading. Please adquire and read these texts now. UNIT 1 ** J.M. Synge. The Playboy of the Western World and Other Plays, (intro. Ann Saddlemyer). Oxford: Oxford World Classics, 2008. ** James Joyce. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, (intro. Jeri Johnson). Oxford: Oxford World Classics, 2008. ** William Butler Yeats -- Moodle UNIT 2 **Edna O'Brien. The Country Girls. London: Phoenix, 2007. **John McGahern. Amongst Women. London: Faber, 2008. ** Claire Kilroy, The Devil I Know. London: Faber, 2012. Basic bibliography to be found in the Humanities Library Regan, Stephen (ed). Irish Writing: An Anthology of Irish Literature in English 1789-1939. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004. Deane, Seamus (ed). Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing (3 volumes). Donnelly, James S (ed). Encyclopedia of Irish History and Culture. Detroit: Thomson Gale, 2004. 4

Kiberd, Declan. Synge and the Irish Language. London: Macmillan, 1993. Peach, Linden. The Contemporary Irish Novel : Critical Readings Ranelagh, John O'Beirne. A Short History of Ireland. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1983. Shaffer, Brian (ed). A Companion to the British and Irish novel 1945-2000. Cambridge: Blackwell, 2005. Electronic Resources available at the UAB: The Cambridge Companion to: James Joyce, Twentieth-Century Irish Drama, Irish Novel, and Modern Irish Culture. 5