COML396 - History Literary Crit

Status
C
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
History Literary Crit
Term
2019A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML396401
Course number integer
396
Registration notes
Benjamin Franklin Seminars
Meeting times
TR 12:00 PM-01:30 PM
Meeting location
DRLB 3N6
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Rita Copeland
Description
This is a course on the history of literary theory, a survey of major debates about literature, poetics, and ideas about what literary texts should do, from ancient Greece to examples of modern European thought. The first half of the course will focus on early periods: Greek and Roman antiquity, especially Plato and Aristotle; the medieval period (including St. Augustine, Dante, and Boccaccio), and the early modern period (such as Philip Sidney and Giambattista Vico). In the second half of the course we will turn to modern concerns by looking at the literary (or "art") theories of some major philosophers and theorists: Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, and Walter Benjamin. We end the course in the mid-twentieth century. The purpose driving this course is to consider closely how this tradition generated questions that are still with us, such as: what is the act of interpretation; what is the "aesthetic"; what is "imitation" or mimesis; and how are we to know an author's intention. During the semester there will be four short writing assignments in the form of analytical essays (3 pages each). Students may use these small essays to build into a long piece of writing on a single text or group of texts at the end of the term. Most of our readings will come from a published anthology of literary criticism and theory; a few readings will be on Canvas.
Course number only
396
Cross listings
ENGL396401, CLST396401
Use local description
No