This course examines the connections between literature of various kinds and its settings, and interrogates the reader’s reaction to the strategies by which place is depicted. We shall be studying fiction, drama and poetry, and it is hoped that at least one writer will be able to visit the course. We shall be going on field trips to explore some London locations, and shall be watching some interviews of writers, and some dramatic versions of their work.
Prerequisites:
None
Learning outcomes:
Students who complete the course will have developed a good understanding of the individual texts, and be able to relate them to their settings and the significance of these.
Method of presentation:
Lectures, seminar discussions, and student presentations, a visit from a writer, dramatised versions of texts.
Field study:
We shall combine field trips with academic work to widen knowledge and enable the development of informed opinion.
Required work and form of assessment:
Class participation, including one class presentation (25%);
midterm exam (25%);
final exam (25%);
one 2,000 word paper (25%).
Students will be expected to contribute to discussions on a regular basis.
content:
Week 1: T.S. Eliot’s long poem ‘The Waste Land’ (1922)
We shall watch a dramatic version of this poem, which William Carlos Williams called a ‘catastrophe’ – because he knew it was a great poem. We shall talk about T.S. Eliot as the grand old man of the twentieth century and also as a creative neurotic. In this opening class the course as a whole will be outlined, and class presentations will be assigned and explained.
Week 2: Iris Murdoch’s novel A Word Child (1975) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall watch an interview with Iris Murdoch, discuss the novel’s London setting, and the influence of T.S. Eliot on this, and also the pervasive influence of the imaginary spaces of J.M. Barrie’s 1904 play Peter Pan.
Week 3: Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs Dalloway (1925)
We shall discuss the novel (which must be read in its entirety before class) as a pioneering work of fiction, and watch an extract from a film version. We shall discuss T.S. Eliot’s influence on the work, and analyse in particular the London setting.
Week 4: Walk round Mrs Dalloway’s London
A detailed handout will be supplied for this walk, in which we shall retrace Mrs Dalloway’s footsteps at the opening of the novel, and note both what she observed and what she failed to observe. Additional points of interest on the walk will also be included in our own observations, and, time permitting, we shall also visit locations in A Word Child.
Week 5: Peter Carey’s novel His Illegal Self (2008) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall examine the ways in which the action of this complex and ambiguous novel switches between New York City and the Australian Bush.
Week 6: Martina Evans’ collection of poems Facing the Public (2009)(which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall listen to the writer read her own work, and analyse the Irish and the London settings.
MID-TERM EXAM
Week 7: Sarah Waters’ novel The Little Stranger (2009) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall discuss this supernatural detective story in terms of its setting in the English Midlands and its setting just after the second world war.
Week 8: Amy Rosenthal’s play On the Rocks (2008)
It is hoped that the playwright herself will be able to visit the class and talk about the ways her play (which must be read before class) portrays D.H. Lawrence, Katherine Mansfield, and their partners in the historically accurate setting of rural Cornwall during the first world war.
Week 9: Ian McEwan’s novel Saturday (2005) (which must be read in its entirety before class) We shall discuss the novel’s philosophical speculations about the invasion of Iraq in the context of its setting very close to IES, and also the debt which it owes to Mrs Dalloway.
Week 10: Field trip: walk round the locations in Saturday
A handout will be supplied for this walk.
Week 11: Jean Rhys’ novel Voyage in the Dark (1934) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall discuss the switching of locations between London and the Caribbean, and the narrator’s neurotic attitude to both.
Week 12: Conclusions
We shall reflect on what we have learnt, and what opinions we have formed, and also prepare for the final examination.
Required readings:
(Any edition may be used)
Carey, Peter. His Illegal Self (2008)
Eliot, T.S. ‘The Waste Land’ (1922)
Evans, Martina. Facing the Public (2009)
McEwan, Ian. Saturday (2005)
Murdoch, Iris. A Word Child (1975)
Rhys, Jean. Voyage in the Dark (1934)
Rosenthal, Amy. On the Rocks (2008)
Waters, Sarah. The Little Stranger (2009)
Woolf, Virginia. Mrs Dalloway (1925)
Further reading should be made up of additional texts by the same authors. Please note that this course requires CLOSE reading of the texts. They have been arranged so that longer texts alternate with shorter texts and field trips. Close and careful reading should therefore always be possible.
Brief Biography of Instructor:
Dr. Mary Condé holds degrees in literature, social anthropology and the politics of rights from the universities of Oxford and London. She is Senior Lecturer and Senior Research Fellow in English at Queen Mary, University of London. Her most recent article (2010) was on the African American writer Andrea Lee, her most recent guest lecture (2009) was at Yeditepe University, Istanbul, and her most recent conference paper (2010), on Rudyard Kipling, was presented at the University of Angers.
Literature And Place
This course examines the connections between literature of various kinds and its settings, and interrogates the reader’s reaction to the strategies by which place is depicted. We shall be studying fiction, drama and poetry, and it is hoped that at least one writer will be able to visit the course. We shall be going on field trips to explore some London locations, and shall be watching some interviews of writers, and some dramatic versions of their work.
None
Students who complete the course will have developed a good understanding of the individual texts, and be able to relate them to their settings and the significance of these.
Lectures, seminar discussions, and student presentations, a visit from a writer, dramatised versions of texts.
We shall combine field trips with academic work to widen knowledge and enable the development of informed opinion.
Class participation, including one class presentation (25%);
midterm exam (25%);
final exam (25%);
one 2,000 word paper (25%).
Students will be expected to contribute to discussions on a regular basis.
Week 1: T.S. Eliot’s long poem ‘The Waste Land’ (1922)
We shall watch a dramatic version of this poem, which William Carlos Williams called a ‘catastrophe’ – because he knew it was a great poem. We shall talk about T.S. Eliot as the grand old man of the twentieth century and also as a creative neurotic. In this opening class the course as a whole will be outlined, and class presentations will be assigned and explained.
Week 2: Iris Murdoch’s novel A Word Child (1975) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall watch an interview with Iris Murdoch, discuss the novel’s London setting, and the influence of T.S. Eliot on this, and also the pervasive influence of the imaginary spaces of J.M. Barrie’s 1904 play Peter Pan.
Week 3: Virginia Woolf’s novel Mrs Dalloway (1925)
We shall discuss the novel (which must be read in its entirety before class) as a pioneering work of fiction, and watch an extract from a film version. We shall discuss T.S. Eliot’s influence on the work, and analyse in particular the London setting.
Week 4: Walk round Mrs Dalloway’s London
A detailed handout will be supplied for this walk, in which we shall retrace Mrs Dalloway’s footsteps at the opening of the novel, and note both what she observed and what she failed to observe. Additional points of interest on the walk will also be included in our own observations, and, time permitting, we shall also visit locations in A Word Child.
Week 5: Peter Carey’s novel His Illegal Self (2008) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall examine the ways in which the action of this complex and ambiguous novel switches between New York City and the Australian Bush.
Week 6: Martina Evans’ collection of poems Facing the Public (2009)(which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall listen to the writer read her own work, and analyse the Irish and the London settings.
MID-TERM EXAM
Week 7: Sarah Waters’ novel The Little Stranger (2009) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall discuss this supernatural detective story in terms of its setting in the English Midlands and its setting just after the second world war.
Week 8: Amy Rosenthal’s play On the Rocks (2008)
It is hoped that the playwright herself will be able to visit the class and talk about the ways her play (which must be read before class) portrays D.H. Lawrence, Katherine Mansfield, and their partners in the historically accurate setting of rural Cornwall during the first world war.
Week 9: Ian McEwan’s novel Saturday (2005) (which must be read in its entirety before class) We shall discuss the novel’s philosophical speculations about the invasion of Iraq in the context of its setting very close to IES, and also the debt which it owes to Mrs Dalloway.
Week 10: Field trip: walk round the locations in Saturday
A handout will be supplied for this walk.
Week 11: Jean Rhys’ novel Voyage in the Dark (1934) (which must be read in its entirety before class)
We shall discuss the switching of locations between London and the Caribbean, and the narrator’s neurotic attitude to both.
Week 12: Conclusions
We shall reflect on what we have learnt, and what opinions we have formed, and also prepare for the final examination.
(Any edition may be used)
Carey, Peter. His Illegal Self (2008)
Eliot, T.S. ‘The Waste Land’ (1922)
Evans, Martina. Facing the Public (2009)
McEwan, Ian. Saturday (2005)
Murdoch, Iris. A Word Child (1975)
Rhys, Jean. Voyage in the Dark (1934)
Rosenthal, Amy. On the Rocks (2008)
Waters, Sarah. The Little Stranger (2009)
Woolf, Virginia. Mrs Dalloway (1925)
Further reading should be made up of additional texts by the same authors. Please note that this course requires CLOSE reading of the texts. They have been arranged so that longer texts alternate with shorter texts and field trips. Close and careful reading should therefore always be possible.
Dr. Mary Condé holds degrees in literature, social anthropology and the politics of rights from the universities of Oxford and London. She is Senior Lecturer and Senior Research Fellow in English at Queen Mary, University of London. Her most recent article (2010) was on the African American writer Andrea Lee, her most recent guest lecture (2009) was at Yeditepe University, Istanbul, and her most recent conference paper (2010), on Rudyard Kipling, was presented at the University of Angers.