ENGL 224
The Origins of Literary Modernity, 1530-1750 Spring 2014
Division I Writing Skills
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Class Details

One way of better appreciating the types of literature we like to read would be to imagine a world in which they didn’t exist: a world, that is, in which you could not buy a book of poems or pay to see a play in a theater staffed by professional actors or read a novel of any kind, because no-one had ever thought to write one. That image, in fact, accurately describes our world in most places for most of its history. The greater part of the world’s societies have gotten by just fine without literature. The question, then, is why anyone ever thought to open a theater in the first place-or write a novel-or print a collection of lyrics. We’ll want to figure that out, and to explain, too, what kind of society is capable of hosting literature as we know it, and what kind of effects literature has in turn: how poetry changes when it gets printed in books, how plays change when they get performed in front of ticket-holders, what kind of opportunities were opened up for writers in the generations around 1600, and equally, what new burdens were placed upon them. At one point, lyric poetry in English, the theater, and the novel were all new, and we’ll need to know whether they had anything to do with the period’s other new things: centralized governments, Protestantism, capitalism, science. We will read poems, plays, and at least one early novel, but our chief task will be to consider the competing accounts of these infant forms offered by contemporaries and later literary historians.
The Class: Format: seminar
Limit: 19
Expected: 19
Class#: 3697
Grading: OPG
Requirements/Evaluation: four short papers, totaling 20 pages or so; informal writing weekly; class attendance and participation
Extra Info: may not be taken on a pass/fail basis
Prerequisites: none
Enrollment Preferences: first-years and sophomores considering the English major
Distributions: Division I Writing Skills
Attributes: ENGL Criticism Courses
ENGL 200-level Gateway Courses
ENGL Literary Histories A

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