1:25p-2:15p MWF (30) 3 cr
OPEN TO MAJORS ONLY. DECLARED MINORS OBTAIN AUTHORIZATION FROM
BH402.
This course is designed to introduce students to important authors,
influential texts, and historical and cultural contexts of English and
American literatures from the sixteenth through the eighteenth
centuries. To that end, we will identify and practice strategies for
reading and writing about literature that represents a variety of
genres, conventions, and techniques as we strive to acquire a greater
understanding and appreciation of works by Sidney, Donne, Herbert,
Jonson, Milton, Dryden, Swift, Pope, and Johnson on the one side of
the Atlantic, and Bradstreet, Wigglesworth, Taylor, and Franklin,
among others, on the other side. Receiving special attention in this
section of the course will be issues related to the various
conceptions of the function of poetry and the role of the poet that
emerge and develop throughout our period.
Because much of the work of this course will be carried on through
class discussion and other class activities, regular attendance and
participation will be required. Also required will be a number of
"first pass" exercises, two formal essays, and a final exam.
Required texts: The Norton Anthology of English Literature ,
Vol. 1, 7th ed.; Defoe's Moll Flanders or Fielding's
Joseph Andrews (TBA).