ENH1220

Reading literature II: worlds in conflict

G Hiller

6 points - 2.5 hours per week - Second semester - Caulfield, Clayton and by flexible delivery - Prerequisite: ENH1010

Objectives Students successfully completing this subject should have developed a sense of how literary texts relate to the periods in which they are written, particularly in relation to the concepts of 'primitive' and 'civilised'; they should recognise the qualities of the genres fiction, drama and poetry, and be familiar with the appropriate theoretical and critical concepts employed in the discussion of literary texts.

Synopsis The aim of this subject is to explore the perennial concepts of the 'primitive' and the 'civilised' and the relationships between them as depicted in literary texts from different periods from the Renaissance to the present. It examines the many different ways in which both the 'primitive' and the 'civilised' are portrayed and questioned. The 'worlds' of the subject's title includes individuals (eg the country-dweller and the city-dweller) and national cultures (eg aboriginals and white settlers); in the latter particularly, the conflict between the two is examined in the context of post-colonialism. Attention will be paid to the ways in which each text reflects certain key aspects of its historical and cultural context, to the literary modes and strategies involved in each, to intertextuality, and to the different theoretical approaches, including the feminist, which may be employed in interpretation.

Assessment Exercise (1000 words): 20%; - Essay (1500 words): 30%; - Examination (2 hours): 40%; - Class work and participation: 10% - For flexible delivery students, assessment will be by exercise, essay and examination.

Prescribed texts

Astley T The multiple effects of Rainshadow Penguin
Brontë E Wuthering Heights Penguin
Cather W The professor's house Virago
Coetzee J Foe Penguin
Defoe D Robinson Crusoe Penguin
Malouf D An imaginary life Pan
Shakespeare W The Tempest Penguin
Extracts from the work of various poets which will be studied, available in the course booklet.

Recommended texts

Abrams M H A glossary of literary terms 6th edn, Holt Rinehart, 1993
Barry P Beginning Theory Manchester U P

Back to the 1999 Arts Handbook