ENGL 43BH: HONORS SURVEY OF BRITISH LITERATURE II: THE ROMANTIC PERIOD TO THE PRESENT
Foothill College Course Outline of Record
Heading | Value |
---|---|
Effective Term: | Summer 2023 |
Units: | 5 |
Hours: | 5 lecture per week (60 total per quarter) |
Prerequisite: | Eligibility for college-level composition (ENGL 1A or 1AH or ESLL 26), as determined by college assessment or other appropriate method. |
Advisory: | Successful completion of college-level composition (ENGL 1A or 1AH or ESLL 26) or equivalent; not open to students with credit in ENGL 43B, 46B or 46C. |
Degree & Credit Status: | Degree-Applicable Credit Course |
Foothill GE: | Area I: Humanities |
Transferable: | CSU/UC |
Grade Type: | Letter Grade (Request for Pass/No Pass) |
Repeatability: | Not Repeatable |
Student Learning Outcomes
- Students will be able to analyze period literature within the contexts of critical theoretical lenses, including theories of literary structure, history, gender and sexuality, socioeconomic class, race and ethnicity.
- Students will be able to contextualize the period literature within the historical continuity of globalization and colonialism from the end of the 18th century to the present.
Description
Course Objectives
The student will be able to:
- Demonstrate knowledge of major writers, key texts, and documents of British literature from the Romantic period through the present
- Identify major literary genres, analyze the connections between these genres, and trace the emergence and development of literary forms during these periods
- Apply relevant critical and theoretical frameworks to evaluate the literature within historical, (multi/inter)cultural, and philosophical contexts
- Demonstrate orally, and in college-level writing, sophisticated analytical understanding of the literary texts via a range of theoretical paradigms
- Demonstrate appropriate formatting and documentation
Course Content
- Major writers and texts
- Early 19th-century literature, including Romantic poetry (e.g., Wordsworth, Keats, Percy Shelley), the Gothic (e.g., Mary Shelley), and other writers, such as Blake, Austen
- Victorian literature (e.g., Dickens, Carroll, Seacole, Wilde, Browning, Tennyson, the Brontes)
- 20th- and 21st-century writers, including modernism (e.g., Conrad, Pound, Eliot, Woolf, Lawrence, Yeats), postmodernism (e.g., Beckett, Rushdie), and beyond (e.g., Kureishi, Murdoch, Lessing, Heaney, Hughes, Walcott, Aboulela)
- Literary genres and forms
- Romantic poetry forms
- Nature writing
- Slave narratives
- Postcolonial/anticolonial literature; writers of the British colonies
- The Victorian novel
- Pre-Raphaelite literature
- Modernism ("free" verse, stream of consciousness)
- Postmodernism (fragmentation, pastiche)
- Relevant critical and theoretical frameworks
- Historical contexts, including dominant and marginalized ethical, philosophical, political, religious, social, and aesthetic perspectives in the literature of this period, including issues around immigration, colonization, and British national and ethnic identities
- Gender studies
- Queer theories; sexuality studies
- Psychological theories (Freudian, Jungian)
- Marxian and other socioeconomic frameworks, including those around British slavery
- Theories of race and ethnicity, including critical race theory
- Postcolonial, anticolonial, and neocolonial studies
- Formalist theories
- Analytical understanding of the literary texts
- Class discussion regarding analytical reading of literary texts
- Composition of literary analysis essays on the literary texts
- Formatting and documentation
- Modern Language Association (MLA)
- American Psychological Association (APA)
Lab Content
Not applicable.
Special Facilities and/or Equipment
2. When taught online, ongoing access to computer with email and basic software capabilities, including relevant Learning Management Systems.
Method(s) of Evaluation
Examinations as determined by instructor
Composition of at least two formal literary analysis essays of at least 1500 words each, these essays must be theory-based and research-based in nature
Informal assignments as determined by instructor
Class discussion
Formal presentations (at instructor's discretion)
Method(s) of Instruction
Reading and discussion of British literary texts
Lectures on the literature and its historical, social, and theoretical contexts
Group projects and presentations
Literary analysis, oral and written
Representative Text(s) and Other Materials
Black, Joseph, et al., editors. The Broadview Anthology of British Literature, Volumes 4-6. 2021.
Robinson, Bonnie J.. British Literature II: Romantic Era to the Twentieth Century and Beyond (available as OER). 2018.
Greenblatt, Stephen, editor. The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 10th ed., Volumes D-F. 2018.
Creative Commons. Creating Literary Analysis (available as OER). 2012.
As this course spans roughly the years 1789 to the present, many of the texts are contemporaneous with this time period (therefore older than five years); anthologies and theoretical texts are updated.
Robinson text available as OER: https://oer.galileo.usg.edu/english-textbooks/16/
Creative Commons text available as OER: https://2012books.lardbucket.org/books/creating-literary-analysis/
Types and/or Examples of Required Reading, Writing, and Outside of Class Assignments
- Reading from representative literary texts as assigned by instructor
- Quizzes on reading comprehension of assigned literary texts
- Analytical and reader response journal assignments on readings
- Composition of extended, theory-based, research-based literary analysis