BA American and English Literature (TQ73)
- Course Code UNU1TQ73401
- Duration 4 Years
- Attendance Full Time
- Award Degree of Bachelor of Arts
- Overview
- Why Choose Us
- Study Abroad
- Requirements
- Course Profile
- Fees and Funding
- Apply
The four-year degree programme in American and English Literature offers a distinctive emphasis on the literature of the United States with a commitment to the study of English Literature. The degree combines the study of American and English Literature within a framework which allows you to develop and pursue areas of particular interest.
Course Structure
The course begins at UEA with introductory modules that provide a firm foundation in many aspects of American life and culture, and a variety of modules in literature, film studies and drama.In the first year you pursue a foundation course in American History, Literature and Culture. This includes modules on: 19th Century American Literature; 20th Century American Literature; American History from the colonies to the Civil War (including Native American history); American history from the Civil War to the present; Introduction to American Studies; and an introductory module that will equip you with the general intellectual and analytical skills necessary for this course.
Years 2 and 4 offer a wide range of choices, with students enrolling in seminars for intensive work on topics such as: Contemporary American Fiction; Reading the Virgin Land; American Drama; Native American Writing and Film; Looking at Pictures -photography and visual culture in the USA; The Beats and the Limits of Writing; The American West; American Gothic; and American Music. Students will also choose from an impressive range of English literature seminars from Modernism to Fantasy and Utopia. This programme also offers students the opportunity to take free choice units in film studies or creative writing.
Your third year is spent abroad.
In Year 4 you will write a research based dissertation, and also have the option of taking advanced seminars in literature and interdisciplinary subjects, for example: American Autobiography;Multi-ethnic American Writing; American Gothic; American Image and Text; or The Golden Year –American Films of 1939.
Assessment
Key skills, issues and ideas are introduced in lectures given by all members of faculty. These are accompanied by more specialist study, undertaken in small seminar groups. You will also spend time studying and researching in the library. You will be assessed at the end of each semester on the basis of coursework, and at the end of each year by examination. In your final year, you will write a dissertation on a topic of your choice and with the advice of tutors. There is no final examination. Your final degree result is determined by the marks you receive in years two and four.
First Class Teaching
The School of American Studies prides itself on achieving the highest standards of teaching, as well as offering first rate provision of course information, grading, and feedback to students on their work. Our teaching is monitored internally by a comprehensive programme of reporting by the students themselves, and by annual review of these reports. All external audits of teaching quality in the last ten years have rated us as "Excellent".
Choice
Modules taught in the School range across American culture, literature, history, politics and film. This means that in your second and final years you shape your own degree, by choosing from over fifty lecture or seminar modules on topics as diverse as the cultural history of American music, US foreign policy, visual culture, African American and Native American history and culture, drama, poetry, the classic novels of the nineteenth century, and much more besides.
Academic Support
To help you shape your degree and chose your modules you will have an Academic Adviser who is a member of faculty within the School, and who stays with you throughout your time at UEA.
Friendly Community
The School of American Studies provides an academic and social ‘home’ for students and teaching staff. Offices are located close together, and all teaching staff hold regular ‘open door’ Office Hours. Students can join the UEA American Studies Society, which organises social events, and use the society’s Facebook page to stay in contact with their friends even when abroad.
Lively Academic Environment
Here at UEA we are engaged in cutting-edge interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary research that seeks to break new ground in the field of American Studies. As committed university teachers, we translate that work into an exciting and constantly evolving range of modules at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Why not take a tour of our website and find out what we are researching and teaching in the School of American Studies?
Unrivalled Year Abroad Programme
We offer every one of our undergraduate students enrolled on a four year degree programme the opportunity to study abroad at one of forty American universities located across the country, from New England to California, Alaska to Louisiana. We also have placements in Canada, and some of our students may elect to spend the first half of their year abroad in the USA or Canada and the second half in Australia.
Half Year's Fee
Our students pay only half a year’s UK fees for their entire academic year spent overseas. This means that you pay the equivalent of only 3 ½ years’ worth of fees for your four years of study.
Great Sources of Financial Support.
American Studies students will be eligible for University bursaries (as outlined in the University's general information). In addition, however, we offer half of our first years £1000 Arthur Miller Scholarships to those scoring top marks in their A level exams, to help finance their year abroad. This is awarded only to students in the school who will be going abroad and is paid out at the end of the second year.
Employment Opportunities
Our graduates find work in a very wide range of occupations, from research to publishing, and from teaching to banking. The extra skills and confidence gained from Study Abroad gives American Studies graduates an advantage in the job market.
Internationally renowned Literary Festival
Each year, UEA brings major writers from the USA and around the world to its International Literary Festival, open to the public and – of course – our students, too. Visitors have included Norman Mailer, Toni Morrison, Elmore Leonard, Gore Vidal, Richard Ford, Jonathan Franzen and Margaret Atwood. Why Study in the School of American Studies?
Why American Studies at UEA?
What Our Students Say
For more information on Study Abroad, please visit our Study Abroad website.

- A Level AAB - ABB at A Level inc Grade B in English Literature
- International Baccalaureate 33 - 32 points inc Grade 5 in English Literature
- Scottish Highers At least one Advanced Higher preferred in addition to Highers
- Scottish Advanced Highers AAB - ABB inc Grade B in English Literature
- Irish Leaving Certificate AAAABB - AABBBB
- Access Course Please contact the university for further information
- HND Please contact the university for further information
- European Baccalaureate 80% - 75%
If English is not your first language you must have a recognised English Language qualification: Minimum IELTS 6.5 with a 6 in each sub-section, or TOEFL 585 (238 CBT / 93 IBT). Please contact us for more information about other qualifications that we may consider.
Students will have the opportunity to meet with an academic on a Visit Day in order to gain a deeper insight into the course(s) you have applied for.
Deferred Entry
We also welcome applications for deferred entry, believing that a year between school and university can be of substantial benefit. You are advised to indicate your reason for wishing to defer entry and may wish to contact the appropriate Admissions Office directly to discuss this further.
Students are required have Mathematics and English at Grade C or above at GCSE Level.
- Year 1
- Year 2
- Year 3
- Year 4
Year 1
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Imagining America: Literature I
Imagining America: Literature I is a level one module designed to introduce the major writers and themes of literature in the United States. For this module there will be a weekly lecture and a two-hour seminar. Lecture Slot: Monday, 1200-12.50. Further information on the timing of the seminar can be found in the published timetable.
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AMSA1F07 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Imagining America: Literature II
Imagining America: Literature II is a level one module designed to expand upon an introduction to the major writers and themes of literature from the United States. For this module there will be a weekly lecture and seminar. Further information on the timing of the seminar can be found in the published timetable.
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AMSA1F02 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Literature in History 1
This is the main introductory module to the study of literature. It aims to help new students to read historically, by offering a range of models of the relationship between literature and history, explored through the study of selected historical and literary moments. The module is taught by a weekly lecture, with an accompanying seminar.
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LDCE1F01 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Literature in History II
This module follows on from Literature in History I, taking in more recent history, and including discussion of how writers of the present make use of the past. The module is taught by lectures, with an accompanying seminar. Attendance at both lectures and seminars is compulsory.
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LDCE1F10 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Reading Cultures I: American Icons
This module provides an introduction to the interdisciplinary research methods and writing skills that are essential for students undertaking a degree programme in the School of American Studies. Students will be encouraged to look at reading American culture across disciplines and media, and to develop their own strategies for learning, from note taking and planning, through locating and engaging with critical opinions, to producing and evaluating academic writing. This module is intended as an introduction to interdisciplinary scholarship and its transferable skills.
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AMSA1F17 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Reading Cultures Ii: Ideas and Ideologies
The module develops and expands the research methods, writing skills, and oral skills acquired in Reading Cultures I: American Icons. By continuing the exploration of contemporary American culture and introducing cultural and critical theory as a means to engage with current ideas and ideologies circulating around American cultural icons, the module will encourage exploration of America's changing position in the world. The module is intended to further facilitate skills in reading, writing, analysis, synthesis, independent thinking, and confidence as self-supporting learners in order to provide a strong foundation for work at levels 2 and 3.
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AMSA1F18 | 20 | Semester 2 |
Year 2
| Name | Code | Credits | Period |
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19th Century American Writing
This module aims to build on and develop your knowledge of the range of American literature in the nineteenth century. We will consider the rise of a distinctly American literary tradition in modes like realism, the gothic, romanticism, naturalism and the detective story, looking to make new connections both among writers and between literature and such larger issues as slavery, economics and feminism.
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AMSA2L59 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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20th Century American Poetry
This module provides a broadly chronological view of American poetry from the start of the twentieth century to the present day. It wonders about what the consequences might be if we consider seriously Emerson's claim (made in 1844), that America might be seen as a poem. Through detailed examination each week of groups of three related poets, the module aims both to question what constitutes an American poetics, and to examine how this conception has changed over the course of the twentieth century. As well as tracing a trajectory in American poetry from modernist to postmodernist modes, one of its primary concerns is also to start exploring how ideas of what an American poetry might be are inflected differently in `mainstream' and in more avant-garde (or `experimental') poetries. Indeed, by explicitly thinking about these differences the module will pay particular attention to the ways in which ideas of nationhood, of political dissent and protest, of poetic `groupings' and canon-formation, are instrumental in determining what we choose to see as America's representative poetry. By the end of the module students should have a wide knowledge of a range of different twentieth-century American poetries, as well as a strong sense of how the political, cultural and literary `tastes' of America across the century have delivered it the sorts of poetry it deserves.
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AMSA2L24 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Adolescence in American Culture Post-1950
This module will suggest that there is a preoccupation with adolescence in postwar and contemporary American culture, and will explore why this is the case. It will do so by introducing students to representations of adolescence in various disciplines, focusing particularly on literature, film, psychoanalysis and cultural studies. Questions to be explored will include: What is 'American' about adolescence? How do representations of adolescence vary according to factors such as gender, race and region? Is there a particular discipline or artistic form which is especially suited to depictions of adolescence?
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AMSA2S53 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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American Masculinities
This interdisciplinary module will examine how national identity and white masculinity are entwined in a conflicting discourse of hegemonic and challenging narratives in the US. It will focus on a specific construction of white masculinity as it has become embedded and legitimized as the normative national identity against which all others are subordinated. The module will examine gender discourses that radically challenge this accepted link between masculinity, whiteness and national identity.
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AMSA2S02 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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American Music
The first book published in the New World was a hymn book. Music, sacred and profane, has been at the centre of American lives ever since. Accordingly, this module will explore the history of American music - but it will also examine the way that its development tells a larger story. Focusing largely on the vernacular musical traditions we will encounter a wide range of musical styles and musicians, each of which has something vital to tell us about the shaping of America. After all, as Plato knew, "When the mode of the music changes, the walls of the city shake."
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AMSA2S45 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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American Paris Between the Wars
This module introduces some of the styles, ideas and ideologies of trans-Atlantic modernism as elements in the creation of a myth. It centres on the American expatriate colony in Paris and, from this, works to contextualise and re-imagine some of the century's most notorious literary and artistic moments. Initial studies of the little magazines, manifestos, publishers, painters and photographers provide a sense of the driving political and aesthetic energies of the period, while the module's middle weeks uses this context to re-read a group of expatriate novels. The final three weeks of the course shifts the emphasis to considerations of memory, memoir and the construction of myth.
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AMSA2L65 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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American Voices: Oratory and Speech in American Culture
As annual readings of the `Declaration of Independence' remind us, the United States was born through voice. Public speech has profoundly shaped American life and various types of oral expression ' such as sermons, lectures, conversation and song ' have had a seminal influence on cultural development. Thinking about voice in America raises fascinating questions. Why has oratory been so important and how has its symbolism changed? In what ways has voice unified, divided or transformed society? Whose voices have been heard, and whose silenced? What happens when the voice is written down?
In this module, we will examine verbal expression in American culture from the oratory of the Iroquois to that of Barack Obama. We'll embark on a chronological survey of public speech, thinking about place of the `oral' in American writings, and the representation of voice in literary history. Each week will involve the active class exploration of passages from speeches, novels, videos and other texts, demonstrating how attention to oral contexts and rhetoric can enrich an appreciation of cultural history.
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AMSA2S10 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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American Women Writers of the Twentieth Century
This module surveys the prose of some of the twentieth century's most important American women writers, writers who (or whose 'other' works) tend to disappear from reading lists that include books by women only out of duty. Along the way we will seek to interrogate the terms with which we begin: American, women and prose. Assuming that biology does not define literature, we will instead seek to understand the social pressures on these women writers, and their responses to them, in an effort to maintain the specificity, diversity and range of these women's literary pursuits.
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AMSA2L63 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Contemporary American Fiction
The purpose of this module is to expose students to a range of prose works by important contemporary American writers. In particular, we will be concerned with some of the key concepts associated with contemporary American fiction, including the definition of the contemporary: postmodernism; metafiction; historiography; postcolonialism; and memory.
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AMSA2L78 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Doing It Yourself: Punk and America
Although the exact provenance of `punk' remains a contested issue, since its emergence in the mid-1970s this transnational musical and cultural phenomenon has become very much a part of the American grain. Indeed, punk's capacity to adopt, appropriate, assimilate, and re-invent a vast and eclectic range of cultural styles, forms, and ideas, as well as its `do-it-yourself,' places it in a longstanding American intellectual tradition of self-reliance and innovation. In this interdisciplinary module, we will attempt to define punk, and consider what it means to be punk, by examining its influence in music, film, poetry, and fiction. The unit will also explore the socio-political implications of punk in terms of gender, sexuality, and community, and question the possibility of punk in an increasingly globalised and commoditised world.
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AMSA2S05 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Films That Made US American: the 1980s Through the Movies
The module will examine America in the1980s. It will look at youth culture, post-Vietnam revisionism and the `remasculinization of America', yuppie culture, and the impact of both AIDS and drug addiction.
Core factors of study in this module are the effects of both New Right morality upon the American socio-cultural landscape, and Ronald Reagan as postmodern president administrating to a `celluloid America' of his own fantastic imagining.
Overall, the module will offer the chance to analyse the tensions and contradictions of the decade as they were played out in both the content and structure of contemporary American film.
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AMSA2S03 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Living On the Hyphen: Cuban America
Since the mid nineteenth century Cuban nationals have been exiled in the United States and created a body of literature alerting the reader to the specifically transnational nature of Cuban identity. Since the Cuban Revolution of 1959 and the concomitant political, economic and cultural isolation of the island, the case of Cuba and Cuban exiles in the USA has been seen to be an exceptional and singular phenomenon with few commonalities with other ethnic groups in the United States. Moving beyond a nation-based model and utilising a transnational theoretical framework this course looks at contemporary Cuban and Cuban-American literature and film from both on and off the island in order to reconceptualise the relationship between the island and its exiles, analysing the evolution of the Cuban exile life and the ways in which questions of exile, return, family, belonging, identity, language and memory are explored and how they differ from previous generations for a variety of political, historical, sociological and ideological reasons (to be explored).
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AMSA2L15 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Looking At Pictures: Photography and Visual Culture in the USA
Photographic portraits, family albums, anthropological illustrations, lynching postcards, advertisements, food packaging and fashion photos are just some of the pictures that will be "read" and analysed in this module. Students will explore how visual texts can contribute to an understanding of nationhood, class, race, sexuality and identity in the USA. Opening sessions will focus on ways of "reading" visual texts. [No previous experience of working with images is necessary]. Most of the semester will be devoted to analysing how photographic images both reflect and contribute to constructions of American culture.
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AMSA2S48 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Radical Cousins Or Rival Siblings? U.s. and Australian Literatures.
This module takes as its point of departure critic Joseph Jones' representation of America and Australia as 'radical cousins' and extends this formulation to ask whether they might equally be thought of as rival siblings. From its establishment as a penal colony in 1788'in large part as a result of the newly independent United States' refusal to harbour Britain's convicts any longer'Australia remained loyal to the Empire, even as it looked increasingly to the United States for guidance in matters of politics and popular culture. The module compares American and Australian literature from the past century or so in order to examine how both countries have engaged and explored shared questions about settler and post/ colonial identity; the staging of cultural independence from Great Britain; the size and scope of the natural environment; and gender performance, among others.
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AMSA2L18 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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The Beats and the Limits of Writing
This module covers the writers known as `The Beats' in terms of their antecedents, the literary and cultural traditions in which they worked, and the social and critical debates that raged during their heyday. Students will be asked to read widely, to compare and contrast different writers' styles, and to make informed judgements about the writers' relationships to the times in which they wrote. The module aims to foster an understanding of the Beat literary phenomenon in literary, political and social contexts. It will also examine the debts Beat writers owed to `American Renaissance' writers including Emerson and Whitman, to wider ideas of the `avant-garde' in the Twentieth Century generally, and to European Romantic traditions. It will investigate how a Beat poetics developed as a response to Cold War `consensus culture', and sought to establish a countercultural (though distinctly American) `tradition'.
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AMSA2L84 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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The Holocaust in American Literature
This module aims to explore representations of the Holocaust in American literature. Students will explore how the Holocaust is represented by American Jewish and non-Jewish authors. Students will consider whether, and how, the Holocaust is `Americanised' by American writers; they will consider some of the ethical and philosophical debates concerning representation of the Holocaust in art; they will examine how American Jewish writers engage with the Holocaust to negotiate questions of Jewish identity; and they will consider the problematic uses and definitions of the term `holocaust' in American culture.
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AMSA2L82 | 20 | Semester 2 |
You may also pick any of the modules that begin with:
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| Name | Code | Credits | Period |
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17th-Century Writing: Renaissance, Revolution, Restoration
This module explores 17th-Century writing in diverse forms, familiar and unfamiliar: the masque, poetry, prose fiction, political prose and the antecedents of what we now call 'journalism'. We will consider the place of these works in society and in their intellectual and cultural contexts, and examine the traffic between literary writing and broader (popular?) print culture.
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LDCE2Y13 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Eighteenth-Century Writing
This module reads major British fiction and some poetry of the eighteenth century in terms of its relation to the development of society which is recognisably modern. We will examine such writers as Defoe, Swift, Pope, Richardson, Fielding and Sterne, and exploring the `rise of the novel', the coming dominance of prose representation in journalism and fiction, the rise of the middle class, the move to an urban cash-nexus society governed by reason and contractual economic exchange, and the construction of new kinds of subjectivities for men and women according to the needs of middle-class patriarchy. In many ways, this module studies the development of the `modern mind'.
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LDCE2Y11 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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European Literature: Encounters With 'Otherness'
This module explores critical and aesthetic issues raised by general and comparative literature, issues of 'influence', reception, intertextuality, translation, formal and generic comparabilities, national identity and cultural borrowing. Theoretical questions will be examined through specific examples and case studies, ranging across different periods and geographies; however the focus is likely to be on the twentieth-century. Works studies may include texts by e.g. Kafka, Camus, Sartre, Sebald, Calvino, Celan.
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LDCE2X24 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Medieval Writing
This module is designed to provide an introduction to the study of medieval English language and literature. In a series of lectures and seminars students will work through a small but representative selection of medieval texts, including lyrics, romance, and poetry, in order to develop a working knowledge of the language - Middle English - and an appreciation of different forms and genres found in medieval writing. Medieval texts and contexts will be used as a means of familiarising students with medieval language, and form the basis for further modules in medieval writing that may be taken within the School.
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LDCE2Y15 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Modernism
The purpose of this module is to study the literature of the early decades of the twentieth century - very roughly 1900-1930 - in particular the work of those authors who attempted to break with received norms of literary style and content. The module is organised as a series of thematic explorations - poetic experiment, memory and desire, myth and innovation, and so on - and thus does not follow a chronological structure. The sequence of guiding lectures focuses its deliberations on a set of specific texts, with their contexts, and these are taken up for discussion in the accompanying seminars. 'Modernism' is this constructed gradually over the semester as a mosaic of closely related issues, each one reflecting on the others. As well as providing an overview of defining textual features, in prose and poetry, the module is concerned also with the interrelation of text and context, offering a range of ways of conceiving of modernist literature as both of, and self-consciously ahead of, its historical moment.
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LDCE2Z15 | 20 | Semester 1 |
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Nineteenth-Century Writing
This module introduces students to classics of nineteenth-century fiction, primarily British but also including two famous French novels to provide comparative foil. The lectures will direct attention to such formal and ideological matters as the free indirect style, literary realism, authorial omniscience and moral didacticism, the representation of history, comic and gothic elements, and the shift towards aestheticism and impressionism in the second half of the century. These features will be related to larger patterns of social change, notably changing relations between social classes, the role of the novel in bourgeois ideology, moral urgency and complacency, the repression of women, the retreat from progressive models of history and the development of a commodifying cultural sphere.
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LDCE2Z30 | 20 | Semester 2 |
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Shakespeare
The aim of this lecture-seminar module is to help you become a better reader of Shakespearean drama. He was writing between about 1590 and about 1610; obviously his plays speak to us over a great cultural distance, and we can find fresh ways of reading them by exploring the theatrical, generic and historical frameworks in which they were written and staged. The lectures, then, will introduce a range of contexts, and the seminars will seek to turn them to account in the reading of the dramatic texts themselves.
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LDCE2Y04 | 20 | Semester 2 |
Year 3
| Name | Code | Credits | Period |
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American Studies Semester Abroad: America
A semester spent at an American university taking an approved course of study. Restricted to students on American Studies 4 year programmes.
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AMSA2Y03 | 60 | Semester 1 |
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American Studies Semester Abroad: Australia
A semester spent at an Australian university taking an approved course of study. Restricted to students on 4 year programmes.
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AMSA2Y02 | 60 | Semester 2 |
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American Studies Year Abroad
A year spent at an American university taking an approved course of study. Restricted to students on 4 year American Studies programmes. For students on programmes:U1T700401, U1TQ73401, U1TW76401, U1T7W8401, U1V238401, U1V2L2401, U1TW76401.
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AMSA2Y1Y | 120 | Year Period |
Year 4
| Name | Code | Credits | Period |
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American Studies Year Abroad Dissertation
Final year dissertation involving research into a specific issue or topic in American culture, society, history or literature. Restricted to students on the 4 year American Studies degree programmes. Topics will already have been approved on the basis of dissertation proposals submitted during the year abroad.
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AMSA3Y05 | 30 | Semester 1 |
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American Autobiography
This module examines the fascination of American literature with questions of selfhood, identity and autobiography. Opening sessions of the module will look at ways in which the very idea of America and its literature emerges from early-national attempts to 'write the self' and discuss changing theories of selfhood, identity and individuality as they are played out in America's historical development from colony, to nation, to postmodern superpower. Subsequent sessions will focus on specific texts of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries which engage questions of selfhood in order to define, maintain and develop an idea of what being an American might mean.
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AMSA3L07 | 30 | Semester 1 |
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American Drama 1970-Present
This module will be concerned with exploring the work of American dramatists in the context of the social, political and cultural life of the country. In particular, it will give attention to the work of new women and African-American writers as well as to that of established dramatists.
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AMSA3L19 | 30 | Semester 1 |
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American Gothic
American fiction began in the period of the European Gothic novel, which thus marked the American tradition from the first. In this seminar module we will establish the meaning of gothic conventions and consider their persisting effects in American fiction.
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AMSA3L62 | 30 | Semester 2 |
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Mark Twain and the Gilded Age
According to William Faulkner, Mark Twain was 'the first truly American writer ['] the father of American literature.' This module will test such paternity claims and examine their wider ramifications. We will explore Twain's writing, his relationship to the Gilded Age, his contemporaries, and his influence on later American writers. As both author and man, Twain contained multitudes. Few writers have straddled so many genres and styles, and few Americans have embodied so many of the nation's animating forces and tensions. He was, as his friend William Dean Howells felt, 'incomparable', and this module is an opportunity for significant reading and research into his life, work and beyond.
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AMSA3L20 | 30 | Semester 2 |
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Multi-Ethnic American Writing
America has long been interpreted as the location of social possibility founded upon a desire to assimilate and negate ethnic 'others'. This module traces the literary responses of four distinct 'American' cultures: Native American; African American; Asian American; and Mexican American. Each group of texts engage with the specific historical, cultural and political relationships between the US and each author's country of origin or national/cultural history, across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Topics will include race and racism, colonisation, imperialism, slavery, segregation, immigration, and illegality/invisibility, with an emphasis upon contemporary experiences.
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AMSA3L12 | 30 | Semester 2 |
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Tales of the Jazz Age
This module examines American prose of the 1920s in the context of the Jazz Age. American literature of the 20s is often conflated with modernism, or the expatriate experience, or the Harlem Renaissance; this module will consider 1920s writing in the context of the market and the rise of professional authorship, anxieties about imitation and the middlebrow and conformism, and the pressures of commercial success on fiction. It will draw on reception studies and the influence of publication formats (mass-market magazines, serial publication, the burgeoning market for film adaptations). Texts will be drawn from a mix of 'high' and 'low.' After considering the pressures of commercialism on the publication of The Waste Land, texts could include the short stories of Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise, The Sun Also Rises, The Great Gatsby, Babbitt, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Winesburg, Ohio, Glimpses of the Moon, and Manhattan Transfer. Students will also be expected to research journalism of the day, such as The New Yorker and the New York Times, which have accessible online archives.
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AMSA3L31 | 30 | Semester 1 |
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The Literary 1960s
When thinking of the sixties, literature, in general, is not what immediately springs to mind - pushed, as it is, to the background of music and the counterculture. Yet the decade brought about many profound changes in the paradigms of literature. Amongst such changes was the proliferation of metafiction as a narrative response to both the 'exhaustion' of literature in the light of the period's dramatic events, and to the new literary and philosophical developments in critical theory (poststructuralism). There was also the emergence of two 'new' genres: new journalism, and the non-fiction novel.
This module is an examination of literary responses to the many changes and challenges brought about in this decade. It will discuss whether literature simply recoiled into solipsistic abstraction or whether it was a motivating force in the general struggle to conceptualize a `new' or countercultural American consciousness.
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AMSA3L23 | 30 | Semester 1 |
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The Poetics of Place: Post 1945 American Poetry and Environment
The American poet Charles Olson famously declared: `I take SPACE to be the central fact to man born in America, from Folsom cave to now. I spell it large because it comes large here. Large, and without mercy.' This module explores how a range of linguistically innovative American poets, from 1945 to the present, have engaged this question of space and environment in their writings. There will be a particular focus on how scientific literature, natural history writing, field guides, and eco-criticism have contributed to poets' theories of poetry and poetics as well as an emphasis on the role environmental notions of place and space play in forming and critiquing ideas of American identity.
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AMSA3L24 | 30 | Semester 2 |
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The Rising Tide of the Transpacific
This module considers the ways in which American literature has engaged with the opening up of Pacific space from the early nineteenth century to the present. From Melville's adventures on whaling vessels throughout the Pacific, to Pearl Harbour and anxieties about Japanese presence in and beyond the borders of the United States, to writing by contemporary Asian-American authors whose work evinces influences from China, Korea and India, the texts on this course chart the ways in which the Pacific Ocean and its peoples have contributed to, created, and contested American national narratives. The module will develop students' insights into issues of U.S. national history and cultural geography, and deepen their engagement with current theories of nationalism and transnationalism either in preparation for, or as a frame for reflection on, their studies abroad.
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AMSA3L35 | Semester 1 | |
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Writing and New Media in Early America
Contemporary life is dominated by emergent media forms and new means of apprehending reality. But how unprecedented is this? American culture from the Colonial period through the nineteenth-century also witnessed the escalating influence of various forms of `media': an explosion of magazines and newspapers; newly instantaneous telegraph communication; daguerreotypes and photography; mass circuits for public speaking; early sound recording. This was not only a technological and social process but also a literary phenomenon. Just as with today's 'new media,' these changes transformed American writing and are responsible for much of what is striking about classic American literature.
This module focuses on the relationship of literary art to this media landscape during 1750-1900, from the age of Franklin to that of Brady, Edison and Pulitzer. Throughout the semester, we will be defining what we mean by `media', considering the interaction between genre and medium, channels of information, data storage and transmission. Subjects the module will cover include: the emergence of literary journalism; the rise of the foreign correspondent; the symbolic figure of the photographer and journalist in American fiction; the effect of early sound recording on literary aesthetics. Questions it poses include: what effect did fresh modes of writing, listening and seeing have on fiction or poetry?; have `journalism' and `literature' always been mutually-exclusive? How have ethnic groups used such media as distinct modes of expression?
These issues will be approached thematically by media type, with two sessions each on: 1) Colonial newsprint; 2) literary magazines; 3) the mass penny press and telegraph; 4) the lyceum; 5) the phonograph. Authors to be considered along the way include Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Frederick Douglass, Horace Greeley, Margaret Fuller, Henry James, Nellie Bly and Upton Sinclair.
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AMSA3L28 | 30 | Semester 2 |
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LDCE3
Fin De Siecle: Fantasies of Decadence and DegenerationMax Nordau's 1892 Degeneration, attacking fin de siecle decadence, draws together fears of cultural decline and corrupting artistic practice through pseudo-Darwinian thinking about devolution. Yet Nordau's urgent and apocalyptic claims about 'diseased' art draw an ambivalent response from contemporary writers, such as those associated with the aestheticism and decadence of The Yellow Book. It is within the fantastic, however, that Nordau is most directly confronted and social norms most explicitly deformed by art. Wilde's swift move from pedestal to pederast may remove a key figure, but texts such as The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; The Novel of the White Powder; Dracula; Wells' science fiction dystopias and, more recently, Moore and Campbell's From Hell, rehearse, react to, or reflect upon such concerns. These writings share a central tension: are the effects of decadence and degeneration offering pessimistic prophesy or optimistic alternatives? This module would complement nineteenth-century options and offer a perspective on the Modernist module. For students also taking the Gothic it would be related, although usefully focusing on the closing years of the nineteenth century with a different emphasis. more...
LDCE3X50 30 Semester 2 Lost Worlds: Nineteenth-Century Science WritingThis module will take in a range of scientific literatures from across the nineteenth century, including Humphry Davy's Consolations in Travel, Charles Lyell's Principles of Geology and Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, alongside scientific fairy tales, poetry by Tennyson, Swinburne, Rossetti, Constance Naden and May Kendall, and novels by George Eliot and Arthur Conan Doyle. The course will question the boundaries between literature and science in the nineteenth century, asking how the formal features, publishing contexts, and readerships of scientific texts shaped scientific thought and culture in the period, and how new ideas from the emergent sciences were communicated, reshaped, and contested in a variety of literary forms. Lectures will introduce students to historical context by displaying and discussing a wide variety of scientific spectacles, shows, and performances, from soirees and conversaziones to plays, panoramas and stunts, while seminars will focus on close textual analysis. The module will enable students to problematise the definition of `literature' in the nineteenth century, and to consider the active role of literature in constructing, imagining, and classifying the world ' or worlds ' outside the text. more...LDCE3Z64 30 Semester 2 Henry James: Questions of Art, Life and TheoryIn this module students engage with the range of Henry James's writing and also the reproduction of his life and work in contemporary culture. This module aims not simply to add to understanding of James but also to explore the issues that his work raises in relation to the art and history of fiction, philosophy and cultural reproduction. It is suitable not only for literature students who want to study this writer who spans realism and modernism, and short stories, literary criticism and fiction, but also for creative writing students and literature and philosophy students. The final assignment will have a creative writing option that comprises a piece of creative writing with a critical reflection. It can be taken by students who have studied modules in nineteenth-century writing or modernism. more...LDCE3Z42 30 Semester 2 Literature Dissertation: Post-1789 (Spr)This module is an advanced-level module, for final year students only. It provides students with the opportunity to write an 8000-word dissertation on literature of the period from 1789 to the present day (excluding American literature). The dissertation topic must be agreed by a supervisor, and both topic and supervisor approved by the module organiser by the end of the previous semester. more...LDCE3X18 30 Semester 2 Nervous Narratives`We all say it's nerves, and none of us knows what it means', says a character in Wilkie Collins' 1860 novel, The Woman in White. Our aim is to think about how a discourse of the `nerves' ' the `nervous temperament' and nervous illness ' can be both so pervasive culturally and so slippery in its meaning. This interdisciplinary module takes you from the late 17th century, when the concept of `neurologie' first emerged, to the 21st century, linking literary, medical and philosophical writing to explore the representation of the `nerves'. The historical range of the module is not meant to imply a transhistorical understanding of nervous illness or temperament, but rather will enable us to analyse the historically specific nature of the nervous body and what it is made to mean, culturally, within different contexts. In this way, we will be working with issues as diverse as religious `enthusiasm', hysteria and hypochondria, sensibility, sensation, fear of modernity, manliness and effeminacy, shell-shock, PTSD and the concepts of the healthy or fragile body of the nation. Spanning time and genre, the literary texts studied will take us from the earliest, Jonathan Swift's satire, A Tale of a Tub (1704) up to the contemporary: Siri Hustvedt's novel, What I Loved (2003) and her analytical memoir, The Shaking Woman, Or, A History of My Nerves (2010). more...LDCE3X83 30 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Post-1789 (Aut)This module is an advanced-level module, for final year students only. It provides students with the opportunity to write an 8000-word dissertation on literature of the period from 1789 to the present day (excluding American literature). The dissertation topic must be agreed by a supervisor, and both topic and supervisor approved by the module organiser by the end of the previous semester. more...LDCE3X15 30 Semester 1 Literature and Human RightsReading key philosophical, political, legal and literary texts, this module will track the emergence of human rights as a cultural idea from their conception in the eighteenth century, through to the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and beyond in the period after World War Two. The module will address the following questions: What type of human being was presupposed by the declarations of rights? How did the novel help form perceptions about rights and human sympathy? In what ways did the UDHR re-imagine concepts of human rights after the Holocaust? How were these changes reflected in new forms of post-war writing, such as post-colonial and late modernist writing? How can we think about the relation between rights and literature today? This module will suit students who have enjoyed the challenges of philosophy and literary theory. It should also appeal to those who are interested in thinking seriously about the relationship between literature and its `real world' applications and significance. more...LDCE3X54 30 Semester 2 ChaucerThis module explores Chaucer's major writings in their historical, cultural and literary contexts. The module will introduce Chaucer's writing in a range of genres and will examine his works' representation and exploration of society, identity, chivalry, politics, religion and gender, and will also consider the medieval reception of Chaucer's writing. Previous experience of medieval literature will be useful but is not required. more...LDCE3Y05 30 Semester 1 Drama and Literature: the Question of GenreThis seminar will explore the boundaries between drama and other genres (kinds, art-forms, media) in an attempt to investigate a number of interrelated theoretical questions. We shall explore these issues via various types of activity - practical criticism, critiques of literary theory, performance analysis, dramatising prose narrative. The set texts are works of literature which do not quite fit generically - particularly plays that seem to be in some sense 'epic', or novels in some sense 'theatrical', ranging from Shakespeare in the 17th century through to Gay and Fielding in the 18th and Dostoyevsky and Chekhov in the 19th. more...LDCE3X06 30 Semester 2 John Milton's Paradise LostParadise Lost is perhaps the finest poem in the language. Its ambition is breathtaking: it begins before time, ends with time, spans the whole of the created universe, and yet focuses on a single, human relationship, on betrayal, recrimination and reconciliation. It is an attempt to explain the co-existence of evil and an omnipotent good God, a response to defeated political aspirations, and an attempt to create a republican poetics. In the module we will read the poem intensively, and seek to understand it in its historical context. Was there a republican aesthetic? How did writers respond to the collapse of radical political ideals and (comparative) religious toleration when 1660 brought the restoration of Charles II? How have literary historians participated in the occlusion of Britain's republican traditions? While there are no pre- or co-requisites, some knowledge of seventeenth-century literature or history, especially through LITE2Y13 Seventeenth-Century Writing, would be an advantage. more...LDCE3Y70 30 Semester 2 Madness, Medicine, Science and Women's Writing in the RegencyThis module will study late 18th-century and early 19th-century writings in the context of scientific and medical innovation. We consider whether it may be appropriate to view the work of novelists such as Maria Edgeworth, Jane Austen and Mary Shelley as a response to, and even a protest against these newly (or, more correctly, nearly) professionalised, male-dominated worlds. These women writers often concern themselves with the 'consumers' as well as the providers of the services offered by these professions; this module considers why that might be and how this kind of contextualisation might impact upon our readings of their work. more...LDCE3X75 30 Semester 1 Virgil's Classic EpicThis module will explore the centrality of Virgil's Aeneid to Medieval and Renaissance culture. It will examine developing attitudes to the Classical literary legacy and accommodation and reinvention of Virgil's epic poem within new religious, political and literary contexts. The course will begin with exploration of Virgil's poem on its own terms before turning to reworkings of the 'Aeneid' by Augustine, Dante, Chaucer, Douglas and Marlowe, the Renaissance invention of a 13th Book to 'complete' Virgil's poem, and the recasting of classical epic within the very different conventions of medieval and Renaissance romance. Previous experience of classical or medieval literature is not required. more...LDCE3Y18 30 Semester 2 UlyssesThis module will provide students with the opportunity to read one of the most famous, yet notoriously unread, novels of the twentieth century. The module has a number of aims. First, it will give students the time and opportunity to try to read and understand James Joyce's Ulysses. Secondly, the module will introduce students to some of the formal innovations typical of modernist writing through the close analysis of techniques such as interior monologue and mythic analogy. Thirdly, it will allow students to read a wide range of responses to Ulysses, both among Joyce's contemporaries, and in the history of twentieth century criticism. Fourthly, the module will situate the text historically, with a particular focus on the way that the text's obscenity affected its reception and circulation in the 1920s and 1930s. more...LDCE3Z50 30 Semester 2 The Condition of England Novel 1818-2000This module will examine the classic nineteenth-century 'Condition of 'England' novel alongside mid-to-late twentieth-century representations of England (and myths of national identity). Attention will be given to post-colonial writing as a significant part of the question: What is it to be English (or British)? more...LDCE3Z09 30 Semester 1 The Literature of World War OneThe module will examine representations of World War One. As a Level 3 module, the focus will be inter-disciplinary. Literary materials will be contextualised using historical and other sources. Use will also be made of memoirs, letters, diaries, and photographs. Students will be encouraged to conduct research using the internet and other facilities. more...LDCE3Z10 30 Semester 2 Literature and DeconstructionIn an interview with Derek Attridge, Jacques Derrida describes literature as `this strange institution which allows one to say everything'. This module explores the writings of Derrida and related thinkers alongside a range of literary texts, including works by Keats, Shakespeare and Joyce. Through a combination of lectures and seminars, we will think about the strangenesses of literature, look at the ways in which it is an `institution' and consider the kinds of freedom ' of speech, writing and thinking ' it permits. Our aim throughout will be to establish the possibilities for literary criticism opened up by deconstruction. The module is open to everyone, but may be of particular interest to those who studied critical theory in the second year. more...LDCE3X87 30 Semester 1 Shakespeare: Shadow and SubstancePlatonist epistemology permeated Elizabethan culture: the aim of this module is to explore the relationship of Shakespeare's topic of the world as a stage to Neoplatonic conceptions of perception, politics, poetry and love. more...LDCE3Y36 30 Semester 2 The GothicThis module seeks to cover some 'canonical' texts of the Gothic Novel (1764-1820) in Walpole, Radcliffe, Mary Shelley, and to consider some later developments of the gothic mode in later 19th and 20th centuries: Poe, Le Fanu, Stevenson, MR James, Elizabeth Bowen, David Storey and Angela Carter. The course also seeks to introduce students to some of the theoretical and historical arguments around the contested nature of the term 'gothic', the Uncanny, the subversiveness or otherwise of this kind of writing, and its relation to the novel genre. more...LDCE3X41 30 Semester 1 Satire`Satire is problematic, open ended, essayistic, ambiguous in relation to history, uncertain in its political effects, resistant to final closure, more inclined to ask questions than provide answers, ambivalent about the pleasures it offers' (Dustin Griffin). The aim of this module is to investigate the problematic territory of satire. Using examples from modern and contemporary fiction and journalism alongside early modern and classical satire, we will formulate a critical and conceptual map, which will in turn allow us to discuss some of the problems of satire (those of genre, of gender, of politics, of morality, of history), and to explore some of the paradoxes of its strategies and functions (freedom versus limits; subversion versus conformity; transformation versus stasis). Writers under discussion will include Juvenal, Horace, Swift and Pope; John Dryden, Aphra Behn, and Lady Mary Wortley Montague; Evelyn Waugh, Stella Gibbons, and Jonathan Coe. more...LDCE3X62 30 Semester 2 Nervous NarrativesTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X83: NERVOUS NARRATIVES AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X85 20 Semester 1 Children's LiteratureTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X67: CHILDREN'S LITERATURE AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X69 20 Semester 1 Queer Literature and TheoryTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X58: QUEER LITERATURE AND THEORY AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/ EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X60 20 Semester 2 Literature and PhilosophyTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X45: LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X61 20 Semester 1 Literature and Human RightsTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X54: LITERATURE AND HUMAN RIGHTS AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X56 20 Semester 2 Lost Worlds: Nineteenth-Century Science WritingTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Z64: LOST WORLDS: NINETEENTH-CENTURY SCIENCE WRITING AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Z66 20 Semester 2 Madness, Medicine, Science and Women's Writing in the RegencyTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X75: MADNESS, MEDICINE, SCIENCE AND WOMEN'S WRITING IN THE REGENCY AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X77 20 Semester 1 Literature and DeconstructionTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X87: LITERATURE AND DECONSTRUCTION AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X89 20 Semester 1 SatireTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X62: SATIRE AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X64 20 Semester 2 Fin De Siecle: Fantasies of Decadence and DegenerationTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X50: FIN DE SIECLE: FANTASIES OF DECADENCE AND DEGENERATION AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X52 20 Semester 2 Children's LiteratureThis module offers students the chance to learn about children's literature and its development and also to try to write a piece of children's literature themselves. It starts with the history of children's literature, looking at its use as a pedagogical tool, moving through Aesop's fables, fairy tales, Mother Goose, Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and examining other authors such as A.A. Milne, Dr. Seuss, Roald Dahl, Sherman Alexie and Nancy Garden, amongst others. The course looks at issues of genre and content as well as historical context. By studying the development of children's literature, this module also analyses the development of the concept of childhood in Western society. more...LDCE3X67 30 Semester 1 Poetry After ModernismThis module will survey a wide range of post-war British poetry actively engaged with the Modernist tradition of Eliot, Pound and others. Reading critical texts alongside poems, it will introduce students to lesser-known writers, such as the Welsh poet Lynette Roberts and the Scottish poet W.S. Graham, as well as considering well-known English poets such as Philip Larkin and Ted Hughes from a Modernist perspective. Recognising the influence of contemporary American verse on experimental poets such as J.H. Prynne and Paul Muldoon will also be an important theme. A chronological syllabus will take students from 1945 up to the present day, and there will be a chance to write creatively as well as critically as part of the assessment. Students wishing to take this module must have taken LDCE2Z15 Modernism. more...LDCE3Z60 30 Semester 2 The Condition of England Novel 1818-2000THIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Z09: THE CONDITION OF ENGLAND NOVEL: 1818-2000 AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Z03 20 Semester 1 Shakespeare: Shadow and SubstanceTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y36: SHAKESPEARE: SHADOW AND SUBSTANCE AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y40 20 Semester 2 Henry James: Questions of Art, Life and TheoryTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Z42: HENRY JAMES: QUESTIONS OF ART, LIFE AND THEORY AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Z32 20 Semester 2 Regency Women WritersThis module situates the work of various women writers of the Regency period in literary and historical contexts. The main texts under discussion are by Mary Wollstonecraft, Mary Hays, Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, and Maria Edgeworth. The unit considers themes which - although not exclusive to women's writing at this time - occur strikingly frequently in the work of Regency women. These themes include sanity, madness and ideas about the mind, and literary devices such as the love-mad woman. Health, ill-health and the development of medicine are central to these fictions and the course, and we also discuss the figure of the doctor, the quack and the 'psychiatrist' in these texts. We look at writings by Regency women travellers whose destinations ranged from Italy to Bath, Sweden and Revolutionary France. more...LDCE3X80 30 Semester 2 Literature Dissertation: Post-1789 (Spr)THIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X18: LITERATURE DISSERTATION: POST-1789 (SPR) AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING AND EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY more...LDCE3X30 20 Semester 2 Through the Looking-Glass: Nonsense and Modern WritingTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X01: THROUGH THE LOOKING-GLASS: NONSENSE AND MODERN WRITING AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X03 20 Semester 1 Traumaturgies: Reading and Writing Trauma Across ContextsTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X91: TRAUMATURGIES: READING AND WRITING TRAUMA ACROSS CONTEXTS AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X93 20 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Pre-1789 (Aut)This module is an advanced-level unit, for final year students only. It provides students with the opportunity to write an 8000-word dissertation on literature of the period up to 1830 (excluding American literature). The dissertation topic must be agreed by a supervisor, and both topic and supervisor approved by the module organiser by the end of the previous semester. more...LDCE3Y77 30 Semester 1 Revenge Tragedy: Ancient and ModernThis seminar explores the different ways in which the concept of revenge has been conceived and represented in a range of dramatic texts. The module covers three distinct groups of primary materials: classical tragedy (in translation) including Aeschylus's Oresteia; early modern revenge tragedy including works by Shakespeare, Tourneur and Kyd; and modern cinematic explorations of the revenge formula including Get Carter, Old Boy and Tarantino's Kill Bill movies. Topics discussed include the relationship between classical and Christian attitudes to revenge, contemporary strictures upon private vengeance, the representation of justice through the ages, the limitations of the revenge tragedy formula. more...LDCE3Y86 30 Semester 2 Mind, Body and LiteratureThe sense of loss in a Hardy poem, the parallel universe of a science fiction story, the sombre world of a Scandinavian crime novel: all have in common that they make the reader think, feel and possibly act. Drawing on an understanding of literature as writing which both engages and affects us, we look at a variety of literary texts (e.g, by Blake, Hardy, Lawrence, Hughes) and consider what they have in common with the everyday (clocks, teddy-bears, congregation ceremonies) and the bizarre (zombies, unicorns, ghosts). We consider how we understand text worlds, how metaphor relates to the body, whether real emotions can arise from fictional texts. Participants should have an open mind, a desire to understand literary theories, and a readiness to think outside the box. more...LDCE3X09 30 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Pre-1789 (Aut)THIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y77: LITERATURE DISSERTATION: PRE-1830 (AUT) AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y79 20 Semester 1 Poetry of the Long Nineteenth CenturyTHIS IS A 20 CREDIT VERSION OF LDCEX371: POETRY OF THE LONG NINETEENTH CENTURY AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X73 20 Semester 1 Through the Looking-Glass: Nonsense and Modern WritingIt's widely recognised that modernist literature is characterised by a revolution of the word. Less widely recognised, and little explored, is the relationship between modernist linguistic experimentalism and literary nonsense, as practised by Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, and others. This course will begin with these well-known nonsense writers and explore their roots in earlier nonsense, including Shakespeare's, before going on to examine some of the adventures in language of major modernist and postmodernist writers. Authors studied are likely to include late Joyce, early Auden, Stein, Stevens, Cummings, Crane, Nabokov, Koch, Muldoon, Ashbery. The course will also set these avant-garde writers in the unfamiliar context of the mainstream fantasy writers who also come out of Carroll and the nonsense tradition, most likely Tolkien and Peake, whose imaginary worlds are based on their own invented languages. This is not a course on children's literature, but on some very challenging modern literature, though it should appeal to those who take a childish pleasure in wordplay and fantasy, and equally to those intrigued by philosophical issues around language. It would follow on very well from the second-year Modernism module. more...LDCE3X01 30 Semester 1 Poetry of the Long Nineteenth CenturyThe poetry of the nineteenth century is often thought of as being caught between the two stools of Romanticism and Modernism. This module examines the development of poetry from Romanticism to Modernism, and asks in particular whether the poetry of the nineteenth century can claim our attention in its own right, rather than as a late avatar of Romanticism or as a foretaste of the excitements of Modernism. The focus of the module, then, is on close critical engagement with a large range of nineteenth century poetry and poetics, including the work of poet-critic Matthew Arnold, poet-priest Gerard M. Hopkins, and of other writers from Christina Rossetti to Algernon Charles Swinburne. Due notice will also be taken of nineteenth-century continental and American poetry. more...LDCE3X71 30 Semester 1 Literature and PhilosophyThis module explores the relations between literature and philosophy and differing understandings of the self, love and ethics through close reading of philosophical and literary texts. It is organised chronologically and moves from the classical writing of Plato to modern literature. The module designed for final year students who are studying Literature and Philosophy. It is also open only to students in Literature who have taken modules in Philosophy in years one and two; or by special concession at the discretion of the module organiser to other students who have substantial experience in both Honours level Literature and Honours level Philosophy. more...LDCE3X45 30 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Post-1789 (Aut)THIS MODULE IS A 20 CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X15: LITERATURE DISSERTATION: POST 1789 (AUT) AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X31 20 Semester 1 Poetry After ModernismTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Z60: POETRY AFTER MODERNISM AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Z62 20 Semester 2 Queer Literature and TheoryThis module offers students the chance to learn about LGBTQ literature and its development in English-speaking countries, as well as approaches to queer theory. This means analysing sexuality and gender and the representation of such identities in literature. Authors studied may include Virginia Woolf, James Baldwin, Alison Bechdel, Gore Vidal, and Sarah Waters, as well as children's books and young adult novels by Alex Sanchez, Nancy Garden, Ellen Wittlinger, and Marcus Ewert. Authors of theoretical texts looked at may include Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Judith Butler, Leo Bersani, and Teresa de Lauretis. Understanding how LGBTQ characters are featured in literature also helps us to see how queer people are understood in a given society in general. This course also aims to look at a variety of genres in order to see how these different text types work and how they approach similar material in different ways. more...LDCE3X58 30 Semester 2 The GothicTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X41: THE GOTHIC AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X51 20 Semester 1 Mind, Body and LiteratureTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X09: MIND, BODY AND LITERATURE AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X11 20 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Pre-1789 (Spr)THIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y78: LITERATURE DISSERTATION: PRE-1830 (SPR) AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y80 20 Semester 2 Traumaturgies: Reading and Writing Trauma Across ContextsTrauma haunts the writing of the twentieth century. Slavery, war, patriarchy, terrorism, genocide, colonialism, modernity, technology and post-modernity: these legacies demand to be written and read, and engender a writing singular to their traumas. Yet the writing of these wounds, and the critical work that reads it, raises fundamental questions about whether trauma can ever be represented or understood. Spreading beyond their contexts, these questions effect their own traumas, cracking open our assumptions about what it is possible to read, to write, and indeed to think. Working roughly from the turn of the twentieth century to the present, this module reads a selection of theoretical, literary and critical texts that aim to write and read trauma across cultural, historical, personal and public contexts. more...LDCE3X91 30 Semester 1 Literature Dissertation: Pre-1789 (Spr)This module is an advanced-level module, for final year students only. It provides students with the opportunity to write an 8000-word dissertation on literature of the period up to 1830 (excluding American literature). The dissertation topic must be agreed by a supervisor, and both topic and supervisor approved by the module organiser by the end of the previous semester. more...LDCE3Y78 30 Semester 2 Virgil's Classic EpicTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y18: VIRGIL'S CLASSIC EPIC AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y32 20 Semester 2 Early English DramaTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y81: EARLY ENGLISH DRAMA AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y83 20 Semester 1 Writing Life: Biography and Creative Non-FictionHow do writers attempt to capture 'life' in all its various forms? What, if any, are the different requirements in writing the life of a famous (or not so famous) person and that of a city or landscape? What about the 'life' of travel or food and how do you approach writing about the natural world? These are just some of the questions that this module sets out to address. We will be reading a wide variety of texts, from the 'traditional' biography to some of the more experimental examples of creative non-fiction. From Samuel Johnson to essays in The New Yorker, all human (and non-human) life will be there! Students may choose between writing their own piece of Biography or creative Non-Fiction as their final project or submitting a critical essay. more...LDCE3X46 30 Semester 2 UlyssesTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Z50: ULYSSES AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Z52 20 Semester 2 Regency Women WritersTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSI0N OF LDCE3X80: REGENCY WOMEN WRITERS AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X82 20 Semester 2 Medieval Arthurian TraditionsTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y82: MEDIEVAL ARTHURIAN TRADITIONS AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y84 20 Semester 2 Early English DramaThis module focuses on the medieval and early sixteenth century period, exploring conceptions and deployments of drama. Comparative work of different forms of drama, the drama and other artistic media, and the drama and social attitudes will be encouraged. You will explore whether drama successfully produces civic unity; how audiences are addressed and constructed; the theatricality of how the Biblical past is imagined, the significance of staging, place, and gesture; the social and political functions of drama, the representation of women; and protests against the drama from various quarters. Our period ends just as the suburban professional theatre was establishing itself in London in a form that was fundamentally influenced by these much earlier dramatic activities. We shall explore how spectacle and ceremony enabled pre-Reformation communities to celebrate their existence and assert an often contested or otherwise problematic sense of their cultural identity. more...LDCE3Y81 30 Semester 1 Medieval Arthurian TraditionsFrom Welsh folklore to Monty Python, the tales of Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table have excited and intrigued generations. Why? To answer this question we explore the development of the legend from its twelfth-century Celtic roots through to a number of twentieth-century film adaptations. How the legend has been translated across form, genres, cultures and ages will be studied, including examples from Middle English Arthurian Texts, translations of the Welsh Mabinogion, of Monmouth's Latin chronicle and French romance texts. This module will enable students familiar with Sir Gawain and the Green Knight to enhance their awareness of the wider Arthurian traditions within which this text belongs, but is also suitable for students who are encountering medieval literature for the first time. more...LDCE3Y82 30 Semester 2 Writing Life: Biography and Creative Non-FictionTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3X46: WRITING LIFE: BIOGRAPHY AND CREATIVE NON-FICTION AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3X48 20 Semester 2 Revenge Tragedy: Ancient and ModernTHIS MODULE IS A 20-CREDIT VERSION OF LDCE3Y86: REVENGE TRAGEDY: ANCIENT AND MODERN AND IS AVAILABLE TO VISITING/EXCHANGE STUDENTS ONLY. more...LDCE3Y88 20 Semester 2
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American Autobiography
This module examines the fascination of American literature with questions of selfhood, identity and autobiography. Opening sessions of the module will look at ways in which the very idea of America and its literature emerges from early-national attempts to 'write the self' and discuss changing theories of selfhood, identity and individuality as they are played out in America's historical development from colony, to nation, to postmodern superpower. Subsequent sessions will focus on specific texts of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries which engage questions of selfhood in order to define, maintain and develop an idea of what being an American might mean.
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AMSA3L07 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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American Drama 1970-Present
This module will be concerned with exploring the work of American dramatists in the context of the social, political and cultural life of the country. In particular, it will give attention to the work of new women and African-American writers as well as to that of established dramatists.
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AMSA3L19 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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American Gothic
American fiction began in the period of the European Gothic novel, which thus marked the American tradition from the first. In this seminar module we will establish the meaning of gothic conventions and consider their persisting effects in American fiction.
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AMSA3L62 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Gender in American Culture
The aim of this module is to think about democracy in the United States through a gendered lens. The Declaration of Independence declared that "all men were created free and equal", but throughout the history of the United States certain social groups have been denied their rights to citizenship and democracy. Therefore this module will be focusing upon the ways in which gender has been central to the construction of citizenship and democracy in the US. These concepts are critical elements in the formation of a modern American identity, and this module will provide a broader understanding of this distinctive feature of American history and society.
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AMSA3S22 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Mark Twain and the Gilded Age
According to William Faulkner, Mark Twain was 'the first truly American writer ['] the father of American literature.' This module will test such paternity claims and examine their wider ramifications. We will explore Twain's writing, his relationship to the Gilded Age, his contemporaries, and his influence on later American writers. As both author and man, Twain contained multitudes. Few writers have straddled so many genres and styles, and few Americans have embodied so many of the nation's animating forces and tensions. He was, as his friend William Dean Howells felt, 'incomparable', and this module is an opportunity for significant reading and research into his life, work and beyond.
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AMSA3L20 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Multi-Ethnic American Writing
America has long been interpreted as the location of social possibility founded upon a desire to assimilate and negate ethnic 'others'. This module traces the literary responses of four distinct 'American' cultures: Native American; African American; Asian American; and Mexican American. Each group of texts engage with the specific historical, cultural and political relationships between the US and each author's country of origin or national/cultural history, across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Topics will include race and racism, colonisation, imperialism, slavery, segregation, immigration, and illegality/invisibility, with an emphasis upon contemporary experiences.
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AMSA3L12 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Native American Writing and Film
This module considers Native American writing and film as sites of cultural and political resistance, analysing the ways in which a diverse range of Native authors, screenwriters and directors within the United States respond to contemporary tribal socio-economic and political conditions. Taking popular ideas of 'the Indian', this module considers the ways in which stereotypes and audience expectations are subverted and challenged. Topics include race and racism, indigeneity, identity, culture, gender, genre, land and notions of 'home', community, dialogue, postcolonial theory in its application to those who remain colonised, and political issues such as human rights and environmental racism.
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AMSA3S02 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Place, Race and Space: American Migration and Citizenship
This module will examine the contradictions of place-making, spatial mobility, and citizenship in the Americas by looking at the movement and settlement of immigrants and migrants since the 1870s. Although the concepts of place-making and spatial mobility appear to be contradictory, immigrants and migrants in their quest to find a home, move across regions, borders, and continents. Their ability to settle in certain places, depends on the economic and cultural conditions that prevail in the host locality and on the political-economic structure of the host society. Citizenship becomes an important variable in this process, because non-citizens are more vulnerable to social, political, and economic changes.
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AMSA3S11 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Tales of the Jazz Age
This module examines American prose of the 1920s in the context of the Jazz Age. American literature of the 20s is often conflated with modernism, or the expatriate experience, or the Harlem Renaissance; this module will consider 1920s writing in the context of the market and the rise of professional authorship, anxieties about imitation and the middlebrow and conformism, and the pressures of commercial success on fiction. It will draw on reception studies and the influence of publication formats (mass-market magazines, serial publication, the burgeoning market for film adaptations). Texts will be drawn from a mix of 'high' and 'low.' After considering the pressures of commercialism on the publication of The Waste Land, texts could include the short stories of Fitzgerald, This Side of Paradise, The Sun Also Rises, The Great Gatsby, Babbitt, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Winesburg, Ohio, Glimpses of the Moon, and Manhattan Transfer. Students will also be expected to research journalism of the day, such as The New Yorker and the New York Times, which have accessible online archives.
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AMSA3L31 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The American Body
This module reads the changing values, presentations and representations of the body that move through and construct American culture. This module will involve pairing theoretical perspectives with current and historical ideas of the body to allow us to interrogate intellectual and popular meanings assigned to and played out through the body, reading particular moments in American writing, art, photography and popular forms for the things they might tell us about corporality and self presentation, but also about the wider structures of the social and cultural environment. We will engage with canonical debates about race, gender, sexuality and ideas of `representation', but also with categories that cut across and through these modes of reading ' with the normal and the ideal, ideas of illness and wellness, ability and disability, of the organic and the machine, of the body under servitude, or under punishment, and with the whole idea of embodiment in itself. This module ' like all other modules at this level - requires a substantial, regular, reading commitment.
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AMSA3S30 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Great Society: America From Jfk & Lbj to Nixon, 1960-74
This module follows the American story from 1960-1974, from the promise and tragedy of JFK's Camelot, through the achievements and frustrations of LBJ's Great Society, to the period of adjustment ' and disillusionment ' during the Presidency of Richard Nixon and the era of Watergate. The work covers the key political events of a period that saw a defining struggle between liberalism and conservatism ' one which continues to resonate to this day. In part it focuses upon the politicians who helped define the era ' such as Bobby Kennedy, Barry Goldwater, and George Wallace as well as the Presidents. But consideration is not confined to Washington politics: we will look at popular protest, from the Civil Rights movement and Black Power to the New Left, the peace movement, women's liberation, and Stonewall. We consider the war on poverty, the politics of race, the emergence of a new environmental awareness, the questioning of gender, and the sexual revolution. In addition, the unit includes discussion of the continuing significance of the Cold War, not least in respect of Vietnam and the Space Race. Students are also invited to consider the ways in which the dramatic changes and conflicts of the era shaped American culture, especially movies, music, art, and literature
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AMSA3H01 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Literary 1960s
When thinking of the sixties, literature, in general, is not what immediately springs to mind - pushed, as it is, to the background of music and the counterculture. Yet the decade brought about many profound changes in the paradigms of literature. Amongst such changes was the proliferation of metafiction as a narrative response to both the 'exhaustion' of literature in the light of the period's dramatic events, and to the new literary and philosophical developments in critical theory (poststructuralism). There was also the emergence of two 'new' genres: new journalism, and the non-fiction novel.
This module is an examination of literary responses to the many changes and challenges brought about in this decade. It will discuss whether literature simply recoiled into solipsistic abstraction or whether it was a motivating force in the general struggle to conceptualize a `new' or countercultural American consciousness.
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AMSA3L23 | 30 | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Poetics of Place: Post 1945 American Poetry and Environment
The American poet Charles Olson famously declared: `I take SPACE to be the central fact to man born in America, from Folsom cave to now. I spell it large because it comes large here. Large, and without mercy.' This module explores how a range of linguistically innovative American poets, from 1945 to the present, have engaged this question of space and environment in their writings. There will be a particular focus on how scientific literature, natural history writing, field guides, and eco-criticism have contributed to poets' theories of poetry and poetics as well as an emphasis on the role environmental notions of place and space play in forming and critiquing ideas of American identity.
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AMSA3L24 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The Rising Tide of the Transpacific
This module considers the ways in which American literature has engaged with the opening up of Pacific space from the early nineteenth century to the present. From Melville's adventures on whaling vessels throughout the Pacific, to Pearl Harbour and anxieties about Japanese presence in and beyond the borders of the United States, to writing by contemporary Asian-American authors whose work evinces influences from China, Korea and India, the texts on this course chart the ways in which the Pacific Ocean and its peoples have contributed to, created, and contested American national narratives. The module will develop students' insights into issues of U.S. national history and cultural geography, and deepen their engagement with current theories of nationalism and transnationalism either in preparation for, or as a frame for reflection on, their studies abroad.
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AMSA3L35 | Semester 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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US Interventionism, the Cia and Covert Action
The covert activities of the CIA represent arguably the most notorious face of US foreign relations. Yet to what extent is clandestine American interventionism consistent with official overt policies? And how do we come to understand covert action campaigns? This module will introduce the main conceptual and historic debates relevant to the analysis of covert action as a tool of US foreign relations. In so doing it will consider the institutions and processes behind covert action, especially the role of the CIA. It also considers the mediums that narrate and explain American covert action. This will provide a fuller and richer understanding of the United States' place in the international system since World War II, its relationship to other states and non-state actors, and discussions about American identity and the nation's role in the world.
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AMSA3H26 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Writing and New Media in Early America
Contemporary life is dominated by emergent media forms and new means of apprehending reality. But how unprecedented is this? American culture from the Colonial period through the nineteenth-century also witnessed the escalating influence of various forms of `media': an explosion of magazines and newspapers; newly instantaneous telegraph communication; daguerreotypes and photography; mass circuits for public speaking; early sound recording. This was not only a technological and social process but also a literary phenomenon. Just as with today's 'new media,' these changes transformed American writing and are responsible for much of what is striking about classic American literature.
This module focuses on the relationship of literary art to this media landscape during 1750-1900, from the age of Franklin to that of Brady, Edison and Pulitzer. Throughout the semester, we will be defining what we mean by `media', considering the interaction between genre and medium, channels of information, data storage and transmission. Subjects the module will cover include: the emergence of literary journalism; the rise of the foreign correspondent; the symbolic figure of the photographer and journalist in American fiction; the effect of early sound recording on literary aesthetics. Questions it poses include: what effect did fresh modes of writing, listening and seeing have on fiction or poetry?; have `journalism' and `literature' always been mutually-exclusive? How have ethnic groups used such media as distinct modes of expression?
These issues will be approached thematically by media type, with two sessions each on: 1) Colonial newsprint; 2) literary magazines; 3) the mass penny press and telegraph; 4) the lyceum; 5) the phonograph. Authors to be considered along the way include Benjamin Franklin, Walt Whitman, Frederick Douglass, Horace Greeley, Margaret Fuller, Henry James, Nellie Bly and Upton Sinclair.
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AMSA3L28 | 30 | Semester 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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In each year, the School of American Studies offers up to 25% of its students on a Year Abroad, a £1000 Arthur Miller Scholarship. Those students scoring top marks in their A level exams will be considered for one of these awards.
University Fees and Financial Support: UK/EU Students
Further information on fees and funding for 2012 can be found here
University Fees and Financial Support: International Students
The University will be charging International students £11,700.00 for all full time School of American Studies undergraduate programmes which start in 2012.
Please click to access further information about fees and funding for International students.
Applications need to be made via the Universities Colleges and Admissions Services (UCAS), using the UCAS Apply option.
UCAS Apply is a secure online application system that allows you to apply for full-time Undergraduate courses at universities and colleges in the United Kingdom. It is made up of different sections that you need to complete. Your application does not have to be completed all at once. The system allows you to leave a section partially completed so you can return to it later and add to or edit any information you have entered. Once your application is complete, it must be sent to UCAS so that they can process it and send it to your chosen universities and colleges.
The UCAS code name and number for the University of East Anglia is EANGL E14.
Further Information
If you would like to discuss your individual circumstances with the Admissions Office prior to applying please do contact us:
Undergraduate Admissions Office (American Studies)
Tel: +44 (0)1603 591515
Email: admissions@uea.ac.uk
Please click here to download the School of American Studies Prospectus or register your details online via our Online Enquiry Form.
International candidates are also actively encouraged to access the University's International section of our website.

