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LECTURE:
OBJECTIVES The course provides an introduction to some key terms of poetics and critical theory, discusses various approaches to reading and interpretation and provides the students with a basic knowledge of the realm of literary studies. MATERIAL Aristotle, Poetics Montgomery, M., et al., Ways of Reading Green, K. and LeBihan, J., Critical Theory and Practice SEMINAR: OBJECTIVES The general aim of the seminar is to improve the students' reading and interpreting skills. The students are provided with an opportunity to test out in practice some of the knowledge gained from the lecture "Introduction to Literary Studies" and to discuss the critical terms they have acquainted themselves with. In addition, the seminar includes several sessions focused on the use of some more terms of poetics in the analysis of specific poems. Finally, formal properties of an academic essay will be discussed, which are then to be applied in the students' final written projects. MATERIAL Aristotle, Poetics Montgomery, M., et al., Ways of Reading Green, K. and LeBihan, J., Critical Theory and Practice A selection of shorter literary texts to be assigned at the beginning of the Semester. ASSESSMENT Credit requirements consist of a written test focused on poetics and basic critical terms, and of a written essay of 1500-2000 words on an assigned topic. Attendance is mandatory. Last update: UAAZNOJE (16.07.2007)
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Aristotle, Poetics Montgomery, M., et al., Ways of Reading (London: Routledge, 1992) Green, K. and LeBihan, J., Critical Theory and Practice (London: Routledge, 1996) Last update: UAAZNOJE (27.05.2008)
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přednáška + seminář Last update: UAAZNOJE (27.05.2008)
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LECTURE 1. Introduction
2. Figurative Language I - Metaphor, Metonymy, Synecdoche 3. Figurative Language II - Irony
4. Other Basic Concepts of Poetics
5. Genre
6. Narrative
7. Typology of Literary Theories
8. Representation
9. Author. Authorial Intention. Reader
10. Signs & Structure - I
11. Signs & Structure - II
SEMINAR Pilný: 1. Introductory 2. Poetics - I: Metaphor, Metonymy, Synecdoche R: William Shakespeare, "Sonnet 60"; Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Ozymandias" 3. Poetics - II: Irony R: Jonathan Swift, A Modest Proposal; William Shakespeare, "Sonnet 130" 4. Poetics - III: Metre, Rhyme, Verse R: John Donne, "Holy Sonnet No. 10"; William Blake, "The Clod and the Pebble"; Paul Muldoon, "The Coney" 5. Genre, Genre Expectations R: Angela Carter, "The Company of Wolves" 6. Narrative Strategies/ Figurative Language - I R: James Joyce, "The Sisters" 7. Narrative Strategies/ Figurative Language - II R: Samuel Beckett, "First Love" 8. Representation and Narrative Perspective R: D.H. Lawrence, "The Prussian Officer" 9. Representation and Narrative Perspective/ Discourses of Power R: Michael Ondaatje, "Don't Talk to Me about Matisse" (from Running in the Family) 10. Author and Intention R: Edgar Allan Poe, "The Raven", "The Philosophy of Composition" 11. Author and Reader R: Lawrence Sterne, Tristram Shandy, Vol. I, Ch. 1-14
Wallace: 1. Introduction, Course outline and requirements 2. Narrative: Theories of narrative structure; plots and stories 3. Narrative: Point of view and character 4. Narrative: Point of view and character 5. Narrative: Genre 6. Irony, Satire, Allegory 7. Poetry: Poetic form, rhyme and meter 8. Poetry: Poetic language and devices 9. Poetry: Poetic language and devices 10. Drama: Genre 11. Drama: Dramatic structure, naturalism, social messages 12. Test List of texts for discussion throughout the semester-readings will be announced in class from week to week: Auden, W.H. "If I Could Tell You" Austen, Jane Emma (page 1) Bunyan, John Pilgrim's Progress (extract to be specified) Donne, John "The Flea" Ibsen, Henrik A Doll's House Joyce, James "The Sisters" Joyce, James A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (page 1) Lavin, Mary "A Story with a Pattern" Orwell, George Animal Farm (Chapter 1) Plath, Sylvia "Metaphors" Roth, Philip Portnoy's Complaint (page 1) Shakespeare, William Hamlet (extracts to be specified) Shakespeare, William selected sonnets Shandy, Tristram (Vol. 1 Chapters 1-14) Shelley, PB "Ozymandias" Stoker, Bram Dracula (Chapters 1-3) Stoppard, Tom Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (extracts to be specified) Swift, Jonathan "A Modest Proposal," Swift, Jonathan Gulliver's Travels (Chapters 1, 4-6) Wordsworth, William "The Daffodils" Last update: UAAZNOJE (30.05.2008)
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