Note: All page numbers in parentheses refer to the Broadview Anthology.

Similar documents
English 2316: English Literature I

British Literature I: Culture in Con(text) English 261/001: British Literature up to 1800 Spring Semester 2013

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG225 ENGLISH LITERATURE: BEFORE Credit Hours. Prepared by: Andrea St. John

English 100A Literary History I Autumn Jennifer Summit and Roland Greene

ENGL7003: Game of Thrones: Medieval English Political Poetry Eric Weiskott Spring 2018, T 4:30-6:50 Office hours: W 1:00-2:00 (Stokes S407)

Facultad de Filosofía y Letras Colegio de Letras Modernas Departamento de Letras Inglesas

British Literature Classics: Early Modern English Poetry New Hydraulic Engineering Building, Rm. 307 Wednesdays, 9:50-12:15

English Literature: Middle Ages and Renaissance

Early Modern English Poetry

English Poetry. Page 1 of 7

CURRICULUM MAP. British Literature

English 315 English Literature Survey I 2003 Analytical survey of British literature from the Anglo-Saxon period to the Restoration.

ENGL 366: Connections in Early Literature: Chaucer s Ventriloquism

Reading maketh a full man; conference a ready man; and writing an exact man.

3-Which one it not true about Morality plays and Mystery plays of the Medieval period?

REQUIRED TEXTS The Broadview Anthology of British Literature, Vol. 1. The Medieval Period. (Peterborough: Broadview, 2006)

From Chaucer to Shakespeare (LSHV ) Professor Ann R. Meyer Tuesdays, 6:30 9:30 Provisional Syllabus, Spring 2014

BETWEEN ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION: APPROACHES TO ENGLISH POETRY

Centerville High School Curriculum Mapping English 12 1 st Semester Mrs. O Neal

English 10B Introduction to English I Poetics and Politics in Medieval and Renaissance Literature Spring

ENGLISH 240F ( )

Twelfth Grade. English 7 Course Description: Reading, Writing, and Communicating Grade Level Expectations at a Glance

ENG 315 Syllabus Page 1 of 7

FIELD II: Medieval literature Revised: December 2018 Effective: January 2020

Teaching Assistant: Rachel Smith Office Hours: TBD

OSN ACADEMY. LUCKNOW

U/ID 31520/URRA OCTOBER PART A (40 1 = 40 marks) Answer ALL questions. Fill in the blanks with the right answers from the options given :

UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI

1. TEXTBOOKS: Literature: Timeless Voices, Timeless Themes The British Tradition. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2000.

SEMESTER SCHEDULE. Schedules

Date Class Assignments (Readings to be completed by date listed and are subject to change. Listening assignments are marked with )

U.G. 1 st Semester. Paper: ENG101C (Core) Medieval Age ( )

Unit 05: Centuries of Literature

LBCL 292: Modes of Expression and Interpretation I

CP English lesson plans Betteridge

1-The medieval period in English literature extends...

V Conversations of the West Antiquity and the Middle Ages (Tentative) Schedule Fall 2004

DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH GOVT. V.Y.T. PG. AUTONOMOUS COLLEGE DURG SYLLABUS M.A. ENGLISH I SEMESTER - SESSION PAPER- I (POETRY I)

Curriculum Pacing Guide Grade/Course 12 th Grade English Grading Period: 1 st Nine Weeks

B.A.lPart-lfHonsIENGA-1I2016. WEST BENGAL STATE UNIVERSITY B.A. Honours PART-IExaminations, 2016 PAPER-ENGA-I ENGLISH-HONOURS

FIELD III: ENGLISH LITERATURE FROM AS PUBLISHED DECEMBER 2017 STATEMENT OF EXPECTATIONS

: : : 3. Sir Gawain and the Green Night /

Carleton University Winter 2015 Department of English. ENGL 3202A: Chaucer

ENGL10039: Approaches to Poetry (Anne Baden Daintree)

Most frequently borrowed items during Michaelmas 2015

LT251: Poetry and Poetics

WESTERN UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH. PhD QUALIFYING EXAMINATION READING LIST. English 9912 (SF)/ 9932 (PF) RENAISSANCE NON-DRAMATIC

Carleton University Department of English ENGL 2300 D BRITISH LITERATURES I British Literature from the Middle Ages to 1700

HOW TO WRITE A LITERARY COMMENTARY

ENGL 232 POETRY FALL 2014 MWF 11:30 AM 12:20 PM 309 HODGES HALL

#Touchstones 1 Early British Literature

B.A I English (Honours) Semester I Session Paper-I Literature in English ( ) SCHEME OF EXAMINATION

Volume Two French High School I - Part 1 Discovering French Nouveau Bleu 1: Take home tutor CDRom

SELF AND SOCIETY IN EUROPE,

Fall, 2002 Founders 111 Office Hours: M/W/Th and by appointment Extension Poetry is indispensable if only I knew what for.

1 st YEAR LECTURE CALENDAR

Early Modern Lyric Poetry 14 weeks; upper-level undergraduate seminar in English Literature Amrita Dhar

The Canterbury Tales. Teaching Unit. Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition. Individual Learning Packet. by Geoffrey Chaucer

ENGLISH 416: Chaucer s Canterbury Tales Spring SLN T. Th in LL150

August Dear English Fresher

LT251 Poetry and Poetics

U N I T 2 : T H E M I D D L E A G E S E N G 1 2 A

CONTENTS. Introduction: 10. Chapter 1: The Old English Period 21

WRITING ASSIGNMENTS: ESSAYS: Course Syllabus A.P. Literature & Composition Brian Jennings

English 160; Room: Office: MWF 10:30am-11:20am, Fall 2016 Office Hours: MF 3:30-5:00. Poetry and Poetics

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

Literature and Cultural Theory Preliminary Exam Texts. Major Fields of Literature and Culture British Literature and Culture: Early Modern

HUMANITIES FALL 2017 WESTERN CULTURE FROM THE HIGH RENAISSANCE TO ROMANTICISM

LAT 111, 112, and 251 or consent of instructor

Genres and Techniques of Literature

Chaucer-overview English 2322: British Literature: Anglo-Saxon Mid 18th Century D. Glen Smith, instructor

Thursday 15 June 2017 Morning

i. Italicise book titles and the titles of plays and long (for example, epic) poems e.g. Middlemarch; Hamlet; Paradise Lost.

: Winter Term 1 English Readings in Narrative

PRINCIPLES OF LITERARY STUDY: INTRODUCTION TO POETRY SYLLABUS

Course Description: Course Objectives:

English Literature1 1. Generically, literary history works as a progressive decline. The romance has already embarked on this degenerative history.

English IV Honors Pacing Guide Stanly County Schools

HIS 101: HISTORY OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION TO 1648 Fall 2009 Section Monday & Wednesday, 1:25-2:40 p.m.; AD 119

Standard reference books. Histories of literature. Unseen critical appreciation

PART-I ( Honours ) ENGLISH PAPER-II ( NEW SYLLABUS )

Pine Hill Public Schools Curriculum

HIST377: History of Russia, From the Beginnings Until the End of the 18 th Century

FIRST-YEAR BOOK LIST:

ENGLISH LITERATURE 12

Expected Competencies:

ENG (22712) Reading Poetry. Day/Time: Mon, Wed, 8 9:30 am Quarter/Year: Winter 2012 ALH Ph

English 12A. Syllabus. Course Overview. Course Goals

History of Western Music III

J.P.Sommerville THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN BRITAIN

PERIODS OF ENGLISH LITERATURE. Daniel Schulze

Contents 1. Chaucer To Shakespeare 3 92

B.A. Special English Syllabus under CBCS w.e.f (Revised in April, 2016)

ENGL 232 POETRY FALL 2015 MWF 11:30 AM 12:20 PM 317 CLARK HALL

Courage! Honor! Intensity! Valor! Armor! Love! Romance! Youth! = CHIVALRY

DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM (Ph.D.) IN ENGLISH AND LANGUAGE ARTS (INTERNATIONAL PROGRAM) (À Ÿμ À à æ.». 2547)

U/ID 31520/URRA. (8 pages) DECEMBER PART A (40 1 = 40 marks) Answer ALL questions.

Department of English

Anthony Donaldson, Jr Office Hours- Keene-Flint Hall 213- W 12:00-1:50 P.M. and by appointment History Department

Transcription:

ENGL2170: Introduction to British Literature and Culture I Eric Weiskott Teaching Assistant: Margaret Summerfield Fall 2017, M/W/F 12:00-12:50 Office hours: M 2:00-3:00 (Stokes S407) The British Isles were home to an exceptionally vibrant early literary tradition spanning English, French, Irish, Latin, and other languages. British writing connected rulers and rebels, merchants and monks, brewers and bureaucrats. This course is a survey of British literature from the beginnings to 1700. Most texts are in English; some are read in translation. The course focuses on connections between literature, power, and the formation of literary canons. The survey covers all major genres of early British literature. Texts and authors include Beowulf, Marie de France, Chaucer, Margery Kempe, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, and Behn. REQUIRED TEXTS (available at the BC Bookstore) The Broadview Anthology of British Literature: Concise Edition, Volume A (3 rd ed.) (Broadview, 2017) William Shakespeare, The Tempest, ed. Peter Holland (Penguin, 1999) Note: All page numbers in parentheses refer to the Broadview Anthology. SCHEDULE Literature before literature Aug 28 Introduction to early British literature Riddle 47 (79; solution 80) Bards and beer halls Aug 30 Bede, Ecclesiastical History of the English People, 4 (from In Hild s monastery was a certain brother... ) (53-5) Cædmon s Hymn in Old and Modern English (55) The First Satire (59) Sept 1 Ornamental belt buckle (between 46 and 47) The Wanderer (66-8) Skallagrímsson, Höfuðlausn Sept 6 Beowulf, ll. 1-370 (85-90) *Discussion post 1 due on Canvas Monks and scholars Sept 8 Bede, Ecclesiastical History, 1 and 2 (42-6) Sept 11 CHI-RHO page from the Lindisfarne Gospels (between 46 and 47) Nave, Durham Cathedral (between 46 and 47) [Messe ocus Pangur Bán] (60) [Is acher in gáith innocht] (62) Sept 13 Riddle 26 (78-9; solution 80) Riddle 43 (79; solution 80) Riddle 44 (79; solutions 80)

Introduction to British Literature and Culture I 2 Riddle 45 (79; solutions 80) *Discussion post 2 due on Canvas Clerics and kings, history and magic Sept 15 Map of Britain (between 46 and 47) Geoffrey of Monmouth, A History of the Kings of Britain, books 1, 9, and 12 (134-36; 147-50; 154-55) Sept 18 The Four Branches of the Mabinogi, branch 1 (158-69) Ladies, monsters, and courtly love Sept 20 Sir Geoffrey Luttrell taking leave of his wife and daughter (between 46 and 47) Marie de France, Bisclavret (180-87) *Discussion post 3 due on Canvas Sept 22 Betwene Mersh and Averil (205-206) I lovede a child of this cuntree (207) Isabel, Countess of Argyll, There s a Young Man in Pursuit of Me (640) Pronunciation (mediakron.bc.edu/alliterativepoetry/pronunciation) Sept 25 Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, ll. 1-490 (226-39) Rebels, truthseekers, and the status quo Sept 27 Langland, Piers Plowman, Prologue Sept 29 Statute of Laborers (1351) (219-20) Froissart, Chronicles (221) Ball, Letter to the Common People of Essex, 1381 (222) Langland, Piers Plowman, passūs 1, 5, and 7 (436-38) London lawyers and bureaucrats Oct 2 Gower, Cinkante Balades, 28, 33, and 51 Oct 4 Chaucer, The General Prologue, ll. 1-34 (300) Chaucer, The Pardoner s Prologue, ll. 41-174 (353-55) Watch Agbabi perform Prologue (Grime Mix) from Telling Tales (youtube.com/watch?v=-u-ozgjzfjq) Chaucer s Life (mediakron.bc.edu/mappingchaucer/chaucers-life) Oct 6 Opening page of the Prologue to The Wife of Bath s Tale (between 46 and 47) Chaucer, The Wife of Bath s Prologue, ll. 1-828 (331-44) Watch Agbabi perform What Do Women Like Bes? from Telling Tales (youtube.com/watch?v=8lptefghr7a) Oct 11 Chaucer, The Prioress s Prologue and Tale, ll. 19-256 (366-70) Hoccleve, The Regiment of Princes, ll. 1-112 (d.lib.rochester.edu/teams/text/blyth-hoccleve-regiment-of-princes) Butterfield, Chaucer s French Inheritance (excerpt) Visionaries and prisoners Oct 13 Kempe, The Book of Margery Kempe (405-21) Prophecia Merlini doctoris perfecti

Introduction to British Literature and Culture I 3 Oct 16 Oct 18 Oct 20 Detail from an illuminated page from a manuscript of the poems of Charles, Duke of Orléans (between 46 and 47) Malory, Morte Darthur, book 1 (490-96) Cent, The Illusion of the World (665-66) Charles d Orléans, Ballade 8 Midterm exam (in class) Artist unknown, Henry VIII at the Opening of Parliament (between 574 and 575) Wyatt, Songs, 123 (614) Surrey, So Cruel Prison How Could Betide (621-22) The English royal court Oct 23 Artist unknown, Queen Elizabeth I (between 574 and 575) Spenser, The Faerie Queene, ll. 1-495 (670-78) Spenser, Letter to Sir Walter Ralegh on The Faerie Queene (718-21) Oct 25 CLASS CANCELED Oct 27 Philip Sidney, Astrophil and Stella, sonnets 18 and 41 (731; 734) Philip Sidney, The Defence of Poesy (to...the speaking picture of poesy. ) (740-43) Oct 30?Robert Peake, Elizabeth I in Procession (between 574 and 575) Elizabeth I, On Monsieur s Departure (761) Elizabeth I, Speech to the House of Commons, 28 January 1563 (764-66) Nov 1 Lanyer, Eve s Apology in Defense of Women (806-807) Ralegh, The Discovery of the Large, Rich, and Beautiful Empire of Guiana, part 5 (816-21) *Social mapping paper due (1-3 pp.) Nov 3 Bacon, Of Truth (825-26) Marlowe, The Passionate Shepherd to His Love (845) Shakespeare, Sonnets, 20 (887-88) Nov 6 Shakespeare, The Tempest, act 1 Nov 8 Tempest, acts 2-3 Nov 10 Tempest, acts 4-5 Nov 13 Jonson, On Something that Walks Somewhere (902) Mary Sidney Herbert, O (poetryfoundation.org/poems/55249/o-56d2369e67a1d) Lovers and believers Nov 15 Anonymous, John Donne (between 574 and 575) Donne, The Relic (923-24) Donne, Elegies, 19 (925-26) Keating, Bear with Thee, O Letter, My Blessing (649) *Agbabi, Lowell lecture, 7:00pm, Gasson 100 *Discussion post 4: brief reaction to Agbabi lecture Nov 17 Marcus Gheerarerts the Younger, portrait of Barbara Gamage Sidney, Countess of Leicester, and her children (between 574 and 575) Wroth, Pamphilia to Amphilanthus, sonnet 77 (945-46)

Introduction to British Literature and Culture I 4 Herrick, To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time (959) George Herbert, The Collar (971) Nov 20 Marvell, To His Coy Mistress (979-80) Philips, A Married State (988-89) Dissenters, Puritans, and a rake Nov 27 Milton, L Allegro and Il Penseroso (995-1000) *Final paper skeleton due (1 p.) Nov 29 Milton, Areopagitica (1006-14) O Donoghue, This caps all their tricks, this statute from overseas (652) Dec 1 Milton, Paradise Lost, book 1 (1017-30) Dec 4 Cavendish, Of Many Worlds in this World (1150) Dryden, Mac Flecknoe (1183-86) Behn, Oroonoko: or, The Royal Slave (to...all imaginable respect and obedience. ) (1235-53) Dec 6 Pepys, The Diary, May 1660 21-3 (1201-1204) Oroonoko (1254-69) Dec 8 Wilmot, A Satire on Charles II (1324-25) Wilmot, Impromptu on Charles II (1333) Review session *Final paper due (5-7 pp.) Dec 15 Final exam (12:30pm) GRADING Discussion posts 15% Midterm and final exams 20% each (40% total) Paper, 5-7 pp. 20% Participation (including attending the Lowell lecture) 10% Social mapping paper, 1-3 pp. 15% OBJECTIVES Over the course of the semester, you will encounter early literature from the British Isles in its linguistic, social, and cultural diversity. You will learn to recognize the conventions of the major genres of British writing before 1700. Special emphasis will be given to the relationship between writing and social institutions such as families, professions, and royal courts. This course will help you develop skills of literary criticism and written exposition. ASSIGNMENTS The Discussion posts should reflect your initial reactions to the course material. They can, but need not, articulate an argument about the material. Discussion post 4 is a brief reaction to the designated Lowell lecture (Agbabi). For the social mapping paper, you will use the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (oxforddnb.com) to conduct research on one author from our syllabus, or another relevant historical figure, and then compose a short essay connecting the person s life and social context to one of our course readings up to that point, or to another text by an author included in the course. The final paper stages an extended argument about one or more course texts and makes reference to prior scholarship.

Introduction to British Literature and Culture I 5 EXAMS The midterm exam will consist of forty multiple-choice questions about our course readings and key critical concepts from our discussions up to that point. The final exam will consist of sixty multiple-choice questions about our course readings and critical concepts from our discussions since the midterm, followed by four short-answer passage identifications drawn from course readings. PARTICIPATION Students are expected to attend each class having completed the assigned reading. Students should come to class prepared to actively discuss the language and rhetoric of the assigned texts. This is a discussion-based class, and you typically will not need laptops or smart phones. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY Boston College places great value on academic integrity (bc.edu/schools/cas/polisci/integrity.html). I have a zero tolerance policy for intentional plagiarism. All quotations or paraphrases of sources must be cited parenthetically or in a footnote (examples: libguides.bc.edu/c.php?g=44446&p=281300). ACCESSIBILITY If you are a student with a disability seeking accommodations in this course, please contact Kathy Duggan, (617) 552-8093, at the Connors Family Learning Center regarding learning disabilities, or Paulette Durrett, (617) 552-3470, in the Disability Services Office regarding all other types of disabilities.