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48669-01 - Seminar: The Essay: A Bit of Cultural History Based on One Genre 3 CP

Semester fall semester 2024
Course frequency Irregular
Lecturers Ladina Bezzola Lambert (ladina.bezzola@unibas.ch, Assessor)
Content The essay identifies itself in its name: essays 'assay', they test, search, and ask true questions, questions to which the answer is neither foreknown, nor projected; is not even the main aim in the process of searching for it. Essays are about setting out on a journey into the unknown and about representing the process of that journey in the very process of journeying. This makes the essay both a highly personal, dialogic, and a formless form. A form that, while strongly conscious of style and thus highly aesthetic, radically defies form as it defies closure and dogma.
The genre of the essay provides an airy shelter to a wide array of topics covering several centuries: texts range from philosophy, science, religion, women’s rights, literary criticism, satire, and other domains. The aim of this seminar is thus twofold: on an aesthetic level, we will assay the essay as a Protean form reflecting a process of searching, writing, and reading. The second aim is historical in nature: by including texts dating from the late sixteenth through the early twentieth century, the seminar offers insight into radical ideas and thought experiments from particular moments in history, thus allowing students to sketch a cultural and literary history based on the genre of the essay.
Learning objectives Students will familiarize themselves with a wide variety of cultural concerns in the history of English (and Continental European) literature and thought.
Bibliography All primary and secondary texts will be made available on ADAM. For the first meeting, students are expected to read materials in the course folder to week 1.
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).
Language of instruction English
Use of digital media Online, mandatory

 

Interval Weekday Time Room
wöchentlich Monday 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11

Dates

Date Time Room
Monday 16.09.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 23.09.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 30.09.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 07.10.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 14.10.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 21.10.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 28.10.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 04.11.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 11.11.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 18.11.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 25.11.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 02.12.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 09.12.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Monday 16.12.2024 10.15-12.00 Nadelberg 6, Raum 11
Modules Modul: Advanced Anglophone Literary and Cultural Studies (Bachelor's degree subject: English)
Assessment format continuous assessment
Assessment details presentation, active participation
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 Fachbereich Englische Sprach- und Literaturwissenschaft

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