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ENGL266
Logics of Art and Identity in Modern British Literature
ENGL266 FA
Not Currently Offered
This course examines influential texts -- primarily British,
from the late 19th century to World War II -- and is guided
by a central question: How were ideas about the nature and
social function of art bound up with emergent
reconceptualizations of racial, national, ethnic, and
sexual identity? We will ask how modernist cultural
identity articulates (more generally modern) ideas about
individuation and affiliation through values of racial
purity, cultural inheritance, and political (class,
citizenship) status.
MAJOR READINGS
Joseph Conrad: LORD JIM
E.M. Forster: PASSAGE TO INDIA
D.H. Lawrence: ST. MAWR
George Orwell: DOWN AND OUT IN PARIS AND LONDON
Jean Rhys: VOYAGE IN THE DARK
Olive Schreiner: THE STORY OF AN AFRICAN FARM
H.G. Wells: THE TIME MACHINE
Oscar Wilde: THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING EARNEST
Virginia Woolf: MRS. DALLOWAY
Shorter readings by Auden, Beckett, Benjamin, Cauldwell,
DuBois, Durkheim, Freud, Eliot, Fry, Joyce, Kavanagh,
Malinowski, Mansfield, Mew, Nietzsche, Pater, Spender,
Weber, and Yeats.
EXAMINATIONS AND ASSIGNMENTS
Six short papers and a final
exam.
ADDITIONAL REQUIREMENTS and/or COMMENTS
This course meets
the English department's historical knowledge requirement.
Unless preregistered students attend the first class meeting
or communicate directly with the instructor prior to the
first class, they will be dropped from the class list.
NOTE: Students must still submit a completed Drop/Add form
to the Registrar's Office.
COURSE FORMAT: Seminar
REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Level: UG Credit: 1.00
Gen Ed Area & Dept: HA ENGL
Prerequisites:
None
Last Updated on MAR-22-1999
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