11:15a-12:05 MWF (30) 3 cr
OPEN TO MAJORS ONLY. DECLARED MINORS OBTAIN AUTHORIZATION FROM
BH402.
The topic of this section will be "The Archaeology of Early English
Texts," and I mean "archaeology" here in its broadest sense. Although
the primary focus of the course will be on the close reading of
English texts from the beginning to the time of Shakespeare, we will
continually attempt to place these texts in their cultural contexts,
recovering the material conditions under which they were produced and
received in the Anglo-Saxon, late medieval, and early modern periods.
We will, for example, study the Elizabethan book trade to understand
the milieu in which works like the poems of Wyatt and Surrey,
Marlowe's Hero and Leander , and Shakespeare's sonnets
reached the reading public. We will see how the late medieval
explosion of book production and the invention of the printing press
molded the development of canonical forms of literature, language, and
religious and political belief. We will learn how the concurrent rise
of the Gothic style in art and architecture and of more natural, less
stylized literary forms both express a profound cultural shift related
to the rise of affective lay piety. And we will learn something about
monastic life in order to understand how modern conceptions of
literacy as print-based, of literature as high art, and of authors as
independent agents of inspiration warp our understanding of the
intentions of those who recorded such works as Beowulf and
The Wanderer in the Old English period. In the process we
will examine some of these works in their manuscript contexts and
learn how to decipher varieties of Tudor and medieval handwriting. We
will be "archaeologists," then, in the sense that we will attempt to
reconstruct literate cultures from their disparate remains and make
sense of early English texts in the context of what we learn about the
uses of literacy in early times. In fine, we will learn to do the
work of professional scholars in these periods--the kinds of work that
make medieval and Renaissance studies both different and fun.
The texts to be studied will include all or parts of Beowulf ,
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight , Chaucer's Canterbury
Tales , Julian of Norwich's Showings, The Book of Margery
Kempe , Spenser's Faerie Queene , perhaps a Marlowe drama,
and poems by Wyatt, Surrey, Sidney, Marlowe, and Shakespeare.