0% found this document useful (0 votes)
660 views5 pages

Syllabus - Practical Course in Text Interpretation Alex Ciorogar Course Description

This syllabus outlines a practical course on interpreting Romantic texts that will introduce students to canonical Romantic authors from the late 18th to early 19th centuries. Over 14 weeks, the course will use close readings and discussions of poems by Wordsworth, Blake, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats to develop students' critical thinking and interpretation skills. Assessment will include class participation, a midterm test, and a final analytical paper on one of the texts.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
660 views5 pages

Syllabus - Practical Course in Text Interpretation Alex Ciorogar Course Description

This syllabus outlines a practical course on interpreting Romantic texts that will introduce students to canonical Romantic authors from the late 18th to early 19th centuries. Over 14 weeks, the course will use close readings and discussions of poems by Wordsworth, Blake, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats to develop students' critical thinking and interpretation skills. Assessment will include class participation, a midterm test, and a final analytical paper on one of the texts.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5

Syllabus - Practical Course in Text Interpretation

Alex Ciorogar

Course description:

- the course will be using a student-oriented approach to a number of poems


considered representative of the Romantic movement
- the course will cover canonical authors from the end of the 18th and the beginning of
the 19th centuries
- the course should represent an introduction to Romantic writing, as well as a detailed
study of critical methods
- the course will involve students in the process of reading, thus developing their
interpretive skills
- the course will also represent an introduction to some of the contemporary theoretical
discourses
- the course will be based on a reader-response framework
- the course will also function as an introduction to the study of poetry as a genre
(ballad, ode, epic, elegy)
- the course will historically contextualize the close reading of the texts with details
concerning the Pre-Romantic and Romantic periods
- the course will present the main characteristics of the Romantic movement
- the course will offer information with regards to the religious, economic, political,
and social conditions of the age

Teaching Objectives:

- to accustom students with the practices and languages of critical thinking


- to familiarize students with the methods of literary criticism
- to accustom students with the concept of close reading
- teaching students how to adequately contextualize a literary text
- to discuss the poetical conventions of the Romantic period
- to provide information about the writers, texts, and currents of the studied age

Skills Being Developed:

- the ability to annotate and interpret a literary text (poem)


- knowing and utilizing critical instruments and concepts
- contextualizing the studied poems within the limits of the literary conventions of the
18th and 19th centuries
- elaborating convincing arguments and discourses on the studied texts

Teaching Methods:

- interactive discussions

1
- class debates
- student-oriented speeches which explain and discuss the theoretical frame provided
by the secondary reading list
- team work
- eliciting personal responses
- individual and group presentations
- interpersonal communication
- stimulation of critical thinking
- reflective learning
- close-reading
- brainstorming
- dialogues

Bibliography:

- William Wordsworth
- “Lyrical Ballads”, “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey”
- “The Prelude”
- William Blake
- “Songs of Innocence”
- “Songs of Experience”
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
- “Kubla Khan”
- George Gordon, Lord Byron
- “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage”
- “Don Juan”
- Percy Bysshe Shelley
- “Prometheus Unbound”
- “Ode to the West Wind”
- John Keats
- “To Autumn”
- “Ode on a Grecian Urn”, “Ode to a Nightingale”

Teaching Materials:

- classroom, hand-outs, images, photocopies, books, audio-video installation

Course Outline:

- Week 1: introductory class


- presenting objectives and requirements; introducing the general theoretical
frame of the practical course, authors and texts to be studied and methods or critical trends to

2
be used; definitions of Romanticism; the appearance of Romanticism; the two generations of
Romantic poets; the schools of Romantic poetry
- Topic: radical and conservative Romantics; Preromantic schools of poetry;
the persistence of neoclassical themes and forms; talent and genius; the cult of the poet
- Keywords: folklore, history, Bard, imagination, fight against empiricism,
freedom, sensibility, sentimentality, subjectivity

- Week 2: William Wordsworth - Lyrical Ballads, Tintern Abbey


- Topic: The Preface or The English Romantic Manifesto, poetic diction,
reaction against Neoclassicism, the three revolutions, expressive theories, Lake School of
Poetry
- Keywords: democratic revolution, simple language, plain style, the new
definition of poetry and the poet, natural language, prosody
- Students’ tasks: reading the texts and contributing to class debates

- Week 3: William Wordsworth - The Prelude


- Topic: spiritual autobiography; the subjective epic; the egotistical sublime;
blank verse; the sublime
- Keywords: nature, landscape, meditation, growth, development, life-writing,
description, pantheism, transfiguration, metaphysical, spirit, imagination, individualism
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 4: William Blake - Songs of Innocence


- Topic: freedom, imagination, mysticism, symbolism, allegory, mythopoeic,
prophecies, Bard, visionary
- Keywords: The Bible, Christian symbology, innocence
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 5: William Blake - Songs of Experience


- Topic: illuminated printing, states of the human soul, revolution, experience
- Keywords: atheism, sublime, symbolic mental landscapes, Gnosticism,
esoteric knowledge
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 6: Samuel Taylor Coleridge - The Rime of the Ancient Mariner


- Topic: supernatural, lyrical ballad, Gothic, vision
- Keywords: albatross, guilt, redemption, destiny, imagination, medievalism
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 7: Samuel Taylor Coleridge - Kubla Khan


- Topic: vision, dream, fragment, description, supra-rational, idealism
- Keywords: psychology, power of imagination, prophecy
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

3
- Week 8: Lord Byron - Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
- Topic: Romanticism as a cultural pose; the Byronic Hero
- Keywords: cultural construction, travelogue, fame, Spenserian stanza
- Students’ tasks: reading the text, contributing to class debates; mid-term test

- Week 9: Lord Byron - Don Juan


- Topic: satire, anti-romantic hero, ottava rima, irony, cynicism
- Keywords: Romantic Hellenism, return to Antiquity, tragic, satiric, comic
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 10: Percy Bysshe Shelley - Prometheus Unbound


- Topic: Shelley's skepticism; innovation; poetry as the supreme literary form,
allegory and symbolism
- Keywords: mythology, proto-socialism, idealism, skepticism, materialism,
archetype, solitude
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 11: Percy Bysshe Shelley - Ode to the West Wind


- Topic: Satanic School of Poetry, Neoplatonism, materialism, elegy,
imagination
- Keywords: inspiration, freedom, agnosticism, melancholy, hope, rhapsodic
intensity
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 12: John Keats - To Autumn


- Topic: aesthetic turn, luxurious sensations, organicism, disinterestedness
- Keywords: invocation, art for art's sake, beauty, truth, intensity, synesthesia
- Students’ tasks: reading the text, contributing to class debates

- Week 13: John Keats - Ode on a Grecian Urn, Ode to a Nightingale


- Topic: art vs. reality, dreams, tensions between opposite principles, visual
sensations, Cockney School
- Keywords: ekphrasis, odes, inspiration, negative capability, excellence
- Students’ tasks: reading the text and contributing to class debates

- Week 14: conclusions and feed-back - final paper submission

Evaluation Methods:

- the final grade consists of:


- 15% - the score of a mid-semester test
- 30% - class participation
- 55% - the score of the final paper

4
- the final paper is an essay which will interpret one or more of the studied texts using
one of the analytical methods which were studied

Organizational Details:

- students are expected to attend at least half of the delivered seminars

Bibliography (secondary reading list):

- Abrams, M.H., The Norton Anthology of English Literature, W.W.W. Norton, 2000
- Alexander, Michael, A History of English Literature, Palgrave Foundations, New
York, 2007
- Bloom, Harold, (ed.) Romanticism and Consciousness. Essays in Criticism, W.W.W.
Norton, NY, 1970
- Boris Ford (ed.), From Blake to Byron. The Pelican Guide to English Literature,
Vol. V, Penguin Books, 1982
- Burwick, Frederick, Romanticism. Keywords, Wiley Blackwell, Oxford, 2015
- Day, Aidan, Romanticism, Routledge, NY, 1996
- Ferber, Michael, Romanticism. A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press,
Oxford, 2010
- McCalman, Iain, An Oxford Companion to the Romantic Age. British Culture 1776 -
1832, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1999
- Rawes, Alan (ed.), Romanticism and Form, Palgrave Macmillan, 2007
- Stuart Curran (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to British Romanticism, CUP, 2003
- Wu, Duncan (ed.) Romanticism, A Critical Reader, Oxford, Blackwell, 1995

You might also like