ENGL 247

Fall 2016 Part of Term 1

Part of Term 1
Aug 22-Dec 7

Credit: 3 hours.

A study of some of the more noteworthy and influential writers of the last two hundred and fifty years. The course traces the development of the novel as a genre that both celebrated and critiqued Britain and British nationalism. Examines how the novel has been important culturally over time.

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition I requirement.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria in Fall 2022 for:

Humanities – Lit & Arts
Cultural Studies - Western
ENGL 247 class schedule data for fall 2016
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
32304
Lecture-Discussion
P
11:00AM -12:15PM
TR
English Building
Gaedtke, A
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
08/22/16-12/07/16
Degree Notes:
Literature and the Arts, and Western Compartv Cult course.
Section Info:
Doppelgangers, Doubles, and Divided Minds. This course will survey the transformation of the British novel through an analysis of Doppelganger narratives published across more than two centuries. We will examine the ways that doubles recur and evolve from eighteenth- and nineteenth-century gothic fictions of rivalry and demonic persecution to the psychological splitting of the mind that manifests in twentieth-century post-Freudian fiction and a contemporary neuronovel. While observing the formal changes that emerge over the course of several centuries, we will also explore the ways that the Doppelganger becomes a way of expressing larger political and ideological divisions that threaten the notion of Britishness as a stable identity. Religious and national identities are often allegorized in the dark, paranoid worlds of Doppelganger novels as personal rivalries and persecutory agents. This course will not only provide an introduction to the British novel but will ask questions about the ways that identity is both grounded in otherness and divided by it. Readings will include works by William Godwin, James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, Virginia Woolf, Rebecca West, Jeanette Winterson, and Ian McEwan.
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