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26015-01 - Seminar: Early American Gothic, Sentimental, and Picaresque Novels 3 CP

Semester fall semester 2010
Course frequency Irregular
Lecturers Philipp Schweighauser (ph.schweighauser@unibas.ch, Assessor)
Content This seminar is geared primarily at BA students who have completed their 2nd year (including the paper), but Liz and MA students are welcome, too.

Early American novels of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries have seen a fundamental re-evaluation since the publication of Jay Fliegelman's "Prodigals and Pilgrims" (1982) and Cathy N. Davidson's "Revolution and the Word" (1986). While earlier scholarship tended to disparage these texts as weak imitations of British models, contemporary critics are fascinated by their negotiations of central social and political issues of their time: democracy, slavery, gender inequality, the Indian wars, and the transition from a community-oriented republicanism to an individualist liberalism as the young nation's dominant ideology. Reading these texts as responses and contributions to debates surrounding those issues will allow us not only to situate the novels of Charles Brockden Brown, Susanna Rowson, and Hugh Henry Brackenridge both in U.S. history and U.S. literary history; it will also challenge us to ask more general questions concerning the relationship between literature and history. We will study and discuss one novel from each of the three major subgenres: the gothic novel (Brown's "Wieland"), the sentimental novel (Rowson's "Charlotte Temple"), and the picaresque novel (Brackenridge's "Modern Chivalry").
Learning objectives You are introduced to a formative period of American literary and cultural history and engage with some of the theoretical issues raised by historical approaches to literary texts.
Bibliography THE READER FOR THE SEMINAR IS NOW AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT THE HIWIS' OFFICE. All three literary texts need to be read before the beginning of the course. Susanna Rowson's "Charlotte Temple" (ed. Cathy N. Davidson, New York: Oxford University Press, 1987, ISBN 13: 978-0195042382) and Charles Brockden Brown's "Wieland" (ed. Jay Fliegelman. New York: Penguin, 1991, ISBN 13: 978-0140390797) need to be purchased in these editions. Get them at 'Labyrinth' bookstore or order them early. Excerpts from Hugh Henry Brackenridge's "Modern Chivalry" are available as a mastercopy on the reserved shelves in our departmental library (room 21).
Comments Note that this seminar closely relates to my lecture course "American Literature Survey I/IV: Beginnings to Early Republic" (26014-01). However, attendance of the lecture is not a prerequisite for this seminar.

 

Admission requirements This seminar is geared primarily at BA students who have completed their 2nd year (including the paper), but Liz and MA students are welcome, too.
Course application Please register via e-mail to Alex Van Lierde (alex.van-lierde@unibas.ch).
Language of instruction English
Use of digital media No specific media used

 

Interval Weekday Time Room

No dates available. Please contact the lecturer.

Modules Modul English & American Literature (Master's degree subject: English)
Modul Extending the View (Literary and Cultural Studies) (Bachelor's degree subject: Englisch)
Modul Focusing on the Discipline (Literary and Cultural Studies) (Bachelor's degree subject: Englisch)
Assessment format continuous assessment
Assessment registration/deregistration Reg.: course registration; dereg.: not required
Repeat examination no repeat examination
Scale Pass / Fail
Repeated registration as often as necessary
Responsible faculty Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, studadmin-philhist@unibas.ch
Offered by Englisches Seminar

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