ENGL 333A -- Quarter 2008

ENGLISH NOVEL (English Novel: Early & Middle 19th Century) Blake TTh 10:30-12:20 12839

The development of the English Novel in its “golden age.” Attention to themes, forms, and styles in fiction of the Romantic and Victorian eras to the mid-19th C. Primary readings: Mary Shelley, Frankenstein Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion, Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, Charles Dickens, Great Expectations. The course turns on ideas of individuality and aspiration in the period that shape Romantic fiction of philosophic fantasy and Victorian novels of psychological and social realism, such as the Bildungsroman, the love story or marriage plot, and the panoramic, multi-character, multi-plot novel of urban spaces and large, dense social and economic systems. These works contemplate the individual both solitary and in webs of connection to others, in settings of Romantic nature and the "Dickensian" city. We will place the novels in their times with the help of short secondary readings on E-reserves: Robin Gilmour, "Introduction" to The Victorian Period, sel. from Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations, J.S. Mill, ch. 3 "Of Individuality" from "On Liberty," sel. from Elizabeth Gaskell, North and South. While placing the novels in their times, the course suggests the on-going power of these "classic" novels, including references to films that preserve and re-imagine them. Lecture-discussion format; midterm with significant essay component (25%); @7-8 pp. critical paper from a choice of topics (50%); in-class final with significant essay component (25%).

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