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68705-01 - Seminar: The Early Modern Book of Nature 3 CP

Semester spring semester 2023
Course frequency Once only
Lecturers Justin Begley (justin.begley@unibas.ch, Assessor)
Content During the early modern period, God was deemed to have provided humans with two texts: the Book of Scripture (the Bible) and the Book of Nature (the natural world). This course will focus on the book of nature, and will explore how early modern writers (c.1550-1700) interpreted and represented it across forms and genres, from lyric and epic poems to plays, utopian fictions, and scientific treatises. In addition to studying the canonical output of Jonson, Donne, and Milton, the course will delve into texts by women writers such as Margaret Cavendish and Lucy Hutchinson, along with works by lesser-known figures such as Abraham Cowley and Thomas Shadwell. It will investigate how developments in religion, medicine, and literary form helped to reshape understandings of the natural world, while also considering how early modern writers contributed to the growth of animal ethics, vegetarianism, and a burgeoning ecological consciousness.
Learning objectives Students will obtain a broad understanding of how the natural world was interpreted and represented in early modern literature in English, and of the cultural, social, and intellectual contexts in which such literature was produced. They will also improve their skills in reading and analysing texts written in a range of genres from the period c.1550-1700.
Bibliography Ben Jonson, "The Alchemist" (Cambridge, 2016).
Francis Bacon, "New Atlantis" in "Three Early Modern Utopias" (Oxford, 1999).

All other primary material, including poems and selections from plays and scientific treatises, will be made available on ADAM. Optional secondary material will also be available on ADAM.
Weblink ADAM

 

Admission requirements This seminar is for BA students on the advanced level who have completed ALL three introductory modules (including the proseminar papers).
Course application Maximum of 25 students
Language of instruction English
Use of digital media Online, mandatory

 

Interval Weekday Time Room
wöchentlich Friday 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11

Dates

Date Time Room
Friday 24.02.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 03.03.2023 12.15-14.00 Fasnachstferien
Friday 10.03.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 17.03.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 24.03.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 31.03.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 07.04.2023 12.15-14.00 Ostern
Friday 14.04.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 21.04.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 28.04.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 05.05.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 12.05.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 19.05.2023 12.15-14.00 Auffahrt
Friday 26.05.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Friday 02.06.2023 12.15-14.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Modules Modul: Advanced Anglophone Literary and Cultural Studies (Bachelor's degree subject: English)
Assessment format continuous assessment
Assessment details Students will be assessed on the basis of active participation and one written assignment near the end of the term.
Assessment registration/deregistration Reg.: course registration; dereg.: not required
Repeat examination no repeat examination
Scale Pass / Fail
Repeated registration no repetition
Responsible faculty Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, studadmin-philhist@unibas.ch
Offered by Fachbereich Englische Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft

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