610019 American Literature and Culture: The Evolution of the Novel

summer semester 2017 | Last update: 27.02.2017 Place course on memo list
610019
American Literature and Culture: The Evolution of the Novel
SE 2
7,5
weekly
each semester
English

A cursory survey of major American novels and novelists from the Early Republic of the late 18th century to the advent of modernism around the beginning of the 20th century.

The seminar will provide a cursory survey of major American novels and novelists from the Early Republic of the late 18th century to the advent of modernism around the beginning of the 20th century. We will look at typical genres of the novel, including sentimental, historical, gothic and epistolary novels, memoirs, the romance, new journalism, and the novel of manners. The following texts form the core of the seminar: William Hill Brown, The Power of Sympathy (1789), Charles Brockden Brown, Edgar Huntly (1799), James Fenimore Cooper, The Last of the Mohicans (1826), Herman Melville, Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life (1846), Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter (1850), Henry David Thoreau, Walden; or, Life in the Woods (1854), Stephen Crane, The Red Badge of Courage (1895); Edith Wharton, The House of Mirth (1905).

 

Lecture inputs, presentations, group discussions

Active class participation, a presentation with discussion leading, and a 18-22 page research paper.

Students are encouraged to enlist for research topics and topics for discussion leading prior to the seminar.

Prerequisite for Master Program (812): none
Prerequisite for the Diploma Program (Diplomstudium: 343) and the Teacher Training Program (Lehramtsstudium: 344): completed first part of studies

For the Diploma Program (Diplomstudium: 343): SE2: American Literature/Culture, for the Teacher Training Program (Lehramtsstudium: 344): SE2: American Literature and Culture.

Due to substantial differences in the allocation of ECTS-Credits in various curricula (teacher training program - BA/MA English and American Studies), the requirements for this course vary. Information will be provided by the instructor at the beginning of the course.

06.03.2017
Group 0
Date Time Location
Mon 2017-03-06
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-03-13
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-03-20
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-03-27
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-04-03
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-04-24
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-05-08
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-05-15
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-05-22
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-05-29
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-06-12
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-06-19
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free
Mon 2017-06-26
13.45 - 15.15 40130 40130 Barrier-free