ENGL 206

Spring 2021 All Classes

All Classes
Enlightenment Literature and Culture

Credit: 3 hours.

Study in Anglophone and global texts from the period 1600 to 1800, with attention to cultural and historical contexts.

Same as CWL 257. 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 206 class schedule data for spring 2021
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
31983
Online
M
9:30AM -10:45AM
TR
n.a.
Nazar, H
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/25/21-05/05/21
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
Section Info:
English 206 (Enlightenment Literature and Culture); cross-listed as CWL 257There is certainly no moment in history when the world suddenly ceased to be old and became new or modern. But Europe in the long eighteenth century, during the period known as “the Enlightenment,” witnessed unprecedented social, economic, cultural, and political changes that collectively produced a giant leap toward the world we inhabit today. It was an age of revolution and of newfound faith in the rights of the individual, though these rights were by no means extended to all. It was an age of reason, of tremendous advances in science and technology, though reason was by no means the only altar at which so-called enlightened men and women worshipped: God and sentiment remained powerful forces throughout the long eighteenth century. This course offers an introduction to the Enlightenment by focusing on a select group of highly influential literary and non-literary works of the period, primarily from Britain but also from Continental Europe and the United States. Our readings are divided into four parts. After an overview of the Enlightenment spirit in Part I, we will consider such crucial concerns of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century letters as property, race, and empire (Part II); virtue (Part III); and knowledge (Part IV). As our precursor culture, the Enlightenment continues to speak to us today, and our aim this semester is not only to understand its core values but also to link them to our own.
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