
Course Detail
English: Austen
ENGS 143 OL1 (CRN: 61839)
3 Credit Hours
About ENGS 143 OL1
Topics examining issues in 18th- and 19th-century British literature and culture. May repeat for credit with different content. Topics vary by offering; periodic offering at intervals that may exceed four years. Pre/co-requisite: Three hours in English courses numbered ENGS 005 - ENGS 096; minimum Sophomore standing.
Instructor
Notes
Dates: May 22 - June 16, 2023; Asynchronous online
More Information
Section Description
Close readings of four of Jane Austen's novels (likely Northanger Abbey, Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Persuasion) in the context of the Revolutionary and Regency Britain, British Empire, and larger Romantic and later Realist literary trends. Course narrative: Did you know there were debates on slavery, and fear of riots, in the novels of Jane Austen? Too often considered fairy tales about well-to-do marriages, Austen’s novels run the gamut from fake gothic castles to modern, middle-class tourist developments by the sea. In this course you will complete the satisfying task of reading (or re-reading!) all six of Austen’s completed novels during the semester. En route, we will also read and discuss a variety of insightful, influential, and (at times) controversial interpretive approaches to Austen’s novels. Your guide is a professor whose own area of first interest—British Romanticism—situates Austen’s life and texts in their contemporary literary and historical setting. This class will expand your sense of Austen’s own surprising engagement with historical issues as pressing as those we face today. These include debates over British response to the French Revolution, empire, slavery and the material culture of consumerism that developed many of its “modern” features during in her lifetime (1775-1817). Special attention will also be paid to what has been called Austen’s stylistic “revolution” in terms of narrative form, tone, and technique, and to the historical position of her writing in the historical “rise” of the novel in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Section Expectation
Several brief narrative assignments and a longer analytical paper. Graded participation in the form of discussion, either on the course learning platform or Yellowdig.
Evaluation
Based on discussion online, short narrative writing assignments, and a longer paper.
Meetings
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Location
Online (View Campus Map)
Important Dates
Note: These dates may change before registration begins.
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