English Literature 2 3301-L1ENLIT2
The survey practical course in English literature concentrates English literature from Romanticism till the 21st century.
The aim of the course is to familiarize students with the diachronic and synchronic description of British literature through a discussion of major periods in literary history, the presentation of key authors representing those periods as well as major literary styles and genres. The classes also allow students to discern and practice different interpretative paths that follow from different methodologies current in literary studies.
Type of course
Course coordinators
Term 2023L: | Term 2024L: |
Learning outcomes
Having completed the course, students will acquire and/or develop the skills, knowledge and competence in the following areas:
Knowledge
Student will be able to:
K_W01 identify the place and specificity of English Studies against the background of other academic disciplines within the humanities
K_W02 understand key terminology, well established methods and theories of literary studies within English studies, discussed during lectures
K_W04 describe the relation between language, literature, and historical and cultural processes on an advanced level, discussed during lectures
Abilities
Student will be able to:
K_U01 employ the terminology and methodological tools from literary studies, e.g. epic, romance, mock-heroic, Romanticism, the sublime, realism, dramatic monologue, modernism, postmodern literature, etc.
K_U03 analyze literary and cultural phenomena and draw generalizations on their basis with respect to the social, historical and economic context
Social competences
Student will be able to:
K_K03 value responsibility for one’s own work and respect the work of others (academic integrity), adhering to the professional and ethical norms in various projects and other activities undertaken at work, voluntary services, etc.
K_K06 value cultural heritage and cultural diversity
Assessment criteria
No more than three absences are acceptable.
The format of the final exam: written test with open-ended questions
Bibliography
Reading List (obligatory reading):
1. William Wordsworth – “Daffodils,”
2. John Keats – “Ode on a Grecian Urn”
3. Percy Bysshe Shelley - “Ode to the West Wind,”
4. George Gordon, Lord Byron - “Don Juan” (Canto 1).
5. Robert Browning - “My Last Duchess,”
6. Charles Dickens - Great Expectations.
7. T.S. Eliot – “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,”
8. Joseph Conrad – Heart of Darkness.
9. A selected text by James Joyce or Virginia Woolf.
10. Ian McEwan – Atonement
11. Seamus Heaney – “Punishment”
Additional texts will be chosen by the course instructor.
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: