English Literature course (1st semester)

We shall finally start with English Literature course. This course was created for students of Kremenets Regional Humanitarian Pedagogical Academy named after Taras Shevchenko, higher education institution in Ukraine. Students are about to become translators, that’s why their good knowledge of the cultural and historical context is absolutely inevitable.

So I have to underline main aspects of this course. Every class consists of theoretical and historical/textual elements, that are linked together in conclusion. Be psyched up to use all your knowledge of history, philosophy, free arts and language. Philosophy plays enormous role in contemporary culture, and even more it becomes more literature look-alike.

Before the class you have to dig into the texts to be prepared for discussion. The discussion looks to be a principal strategy of our work during the classes. Every module ends with test paper consisting of two questions to be answered freely with no hints or other answer options, and that’s how your progress shall be evaluated. The most of student’s work should be done individually due to the compleсation of the tasks, huge text to be read and wide problems to be investigated.


Discussion 1. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD I

Theory:

1. Periods of English History and Literature

2. The Nature of Literature (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Lyrical Ballads, by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

2. ‘The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman’ by Laurence Sterne


Discussion 2. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD II

Theory:

1. Arthur Schopenhauer’s philosophy

2. The Function of Literature (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Thomas De Quincey’s ‘Confessions of an English Opium-Eater’

2. Novelists of the Romantic period (Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus’)


Discussion 3. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD III

Theory:

1. Immanuel Kant’s ideas as a brand new era in the philosophical thought

2. Euphony, Rhythm, and Meter (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Percy Bysshe Shelley’s poetry works

2. Revolutionary William Blake


Discussion 4. THE ROMANTIC PERIOD IV

Theory:

1. Irrationalism as philosophical trend

2. Literature and Biography (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. ‘Odes’ by John Keats

2. Lord Byron’s ‘Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage’


>> TEST <<


Discussion 5. The Victorian age I

Theory:

1. Friedrich Nietzsche’s ‘Thus Spake Zarathustra’

2. Literary Theory, Criticism, and History (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Robert Browning’s dramatic monologues

2. ‘Treasure Island’ by R. L. Stevenson


Discussion 6. The Victorian age II

Theory:

1. Thomas Carlyle’s ideas

2. The history of English studies (by Peter Barry)

Texts:

1. ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’ by Oscar Wilde

2. George Bernard Shaw’s ‘Pygmalion’


Discussion 7. The Victorian age III

Theory:

1. Impact of Karl Marx on his time

2. The Nature and Modes of Narrative Fiction (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. ‘Mary Barton’ by Mrs. Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell

2. William Makepeace Thackeray’s ‘Vanity Fair’


Discussion 8. The Victorian age IV

Theory:

1. Feminism

2. General, Comparative, and National Literature (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Charlotte Bronte’s ‘Jane Eyre’

2. George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) and her novel ‘Middlemarch’


Discussion 9. The Victorian age V

Theory:

1. Søren Kierkegaard’s work in philosophy

2. Main aspects of Narratology (by Peter Barry)

Texts:

1. ‘A Christmas Carol’ by Charles Dickens

2. Charles Kingsley’s ‘The Water-Babies’


>> TEST <<


Discussion 10. MODERN AGE I

Theory:

1. Henri Bergson

2. The Analysis of the Literary Work of Art (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Thomas Hardy’s novel ‘Tess of the d’Urbervilles’

2. Poetry of Thomas Hardy


Discussion 11. MODERN AGE II

Theory:

1. Sigmund Freud

2. Literature and Psychology (by Wellek and Warren)

Texts:

1. Close look at Joseph Conrad’s lifetime

2. Joseph Conrad’s ‘Heart of Darkness’


Discussion 12. MODERN AGE III

Theory:

1. So called ‘fin de siècle’.

2. Important notes on modernism (by Deb Dulal Halder)

Texts:

1. H.G. Wells’ ‘The War of the Worlds’

2. Rudyard Kipling and his ‘The Jungle Book’


Discussion 13. MODERN AGE IV

1. Some recurrent ideas in critical theory (by Peter Barry)

2.  Brief on World War I

Texts:

1. William Somerset Maugham’s ‘The Moon and Sixpence”

2. Deep look into Maugham’s European background


>> TEST <<


Discussion 14. MODERN AGE V

Theory:

1. Impressionism

2. The Nature and Modes of Narrative Fiction

Texts:

1. Aldous Leonard Huxley and his ‘The Brave New World’

2. Poems by Aldous Huxley


Discussion 15. MODERN AGE VI

Theory:

1. The stream of consciousness novel

2. Modernism

Texts:

1. Virginia Woolf’s ‘A Room of One’s Own’

2. Version of the method: ‘Swann’s Way’ by Marcel Proust (France)


Discussion 16. MODERN AGE VII

Theory:

1. ‘Dreams’ by Henri Bergson

2. More on stream of consciousness

Texts:

1. ‘Ulysses’ by James Joyce (Ireland)

2. Deep and wide contexts: Laurence Sterne, Franz Kafka, Dorothy Richardson, Edgar Allan Poe


>> TEST <<


Further reading

A Brief History of English Literature by Dr.A.R.Bharathi

A History of English Literature by MICHAEL ALEXANDER

THE SHORT OXFORD HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE by Andrew Sanders

A Short History of English Literature Second Edition by HARRY BLAMIRES

Beginning Theory by Peter Barry

HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE by Dr. Digvijay Pandya

English Literature by EDWARD ALBERT

A History of English Literature by Arthur Compton-Rickett

The Routledge History of Literature in English by Ronald Carter and John McRae

THEORY OF LITERATURE by René Wellek and Austin Warren