ENGL 209

Spring 2022 Part of Term 1

Part of Term 1
Jan 18-May 4
Early British Literature and Culture

Credit: 3 hours.

This course surveys more than a thousand years of British literature from the early Middle Ages through the Renaissance and well into the eighteenth century. But what does "British literature" really mean, especially in the context of an island archipelago populated by multiple nations (England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales) and repeatedly subjected to foreign rule (either by violent invasion or dynastic succession)? The range of texts we thus characterize as "early British literature" is staggering, and part of our goal in this course will simply be to appreciate the sheer volume and breadth of written work created in Britain and Ireland between the sixth and eighteenth centuries. We will do this through a necessarily selective sampling of historical periods, languages, and genres. Our authors will range from the famous (e.g., Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Milton) to the lesser-known (e.g., Marie de France, Lady Mary Wroth, and Eliza Haywood) to the unknown (e.g., the anonymous Beowulf-poet).

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition I requirement and ENGL 200.

Students must register for one discussion and one lecture section.

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

Humanities – Lit & Arts
Cultural Studies - Western
ENGL 209 class schedule data for spring 2022
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
31994
Online Discussion
AD1
10:00AM -10:50AM
F
n.a.
Brassell, C
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/18/22-05/04/22
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
31997
Online Discussion
AD2
11:00AM -11:50AM
F
n.a.
Brassell, C
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/18/22-05/04/22
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
32004
Discussion/
Recitation
AD3
12:00PM -12:50PM
F
125 English Building
Ellis, H
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/18/22-05/04/22
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
32008
Discussion/
Recitation
AD4
1:00PM -1:50PM
F
125 English Building
Ellis, H
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/18/22-05/04/22
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
32013
Lecture
AL1
10:00AM -10:50AM
MW
160 English Building
Barrett, R
Part of Term:
1
Date Range:
01/18/22-05/04/22
Degree Notes:
Humanities - Lit & Arts, and Cultural Studies - Western course.
Section Info:
SP22 ENGL 209 - This Spring 2022 version of ENGL 209 will begin in the marketplace of sixth-century Rome, where young English boys are being sold as slaves, and end in the eighteenth-century country house of the German-born Prince of Wales, where the finale of a patriotic opera insists that “Britons never never never will be slaves!” The class will meditate on this contradiction, tracing the millennium-long process whereby the cultures occupying a particular group of islands off the northwest coast of Europe debate over who does and doesn’t count as “British.” Some of the questions we’ll ask over the course of the semester: why is a poem about Danes (Beowulf) celebrated as the original English epic? What is a woman who writes in French (Marie de France) doing on an English Department syllabus? Or a man who writes in Latin (Thomas More)? Why did Londoner Edmund Spenser write his Faerie Queene in Ireland? Is it a coincidence that Aphra Behn publishes Oroonoko in the same year that the Dutch Prince of Orange becomes the King of England?
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