UnivIS
Informationssystem der Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg © Config eG 
Zur Titelseite der Universität Bamberg
  Sammlung/Stundenplan Home  |  Anmelden  |  Kontakt  |  Hilfe 
Suche:      Semester:   
 
 Darstellung
 
Druckansicht

 
 
 Außerdem im UnivIS
 
Vorlesungsverzeichnis

 
 
Veranstaltungskalender

 
 

  Early Modern Literature and Culture (Survey 1/4)

Dozent/in
Prof. Dr. Susanne Gruß

Angaben
Vorlesung
Rein Präsenz

Studium Generale, Gender und Diversität, Unterrichtssprache Englisch
Zeit und Ort: Di 10:00 - 12:00, U5/00.24

Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches
1. Module Allocation:
all modules including an obligatory/optional lecture (Vorlesung) for literature in
LA GS/HS/MS/RS/GY
BA Anglistik/Amerikanistik
MA English and American Studies
MA WiPäd
Erweiterungsbereich English and American Studies

2. (De)Registration:
in FlexNow!: 29.03.2024, 10:00-22.04.2023, 23:59
Guest auditors should first contact the lecturer

Inhalt
How serious did early modern poets take their sonnets? Was Shakespeare really ‘the greatest playwright’ in the early modern period? Why do we have so many portraits of Elizabeth I? And were there Renaissance women writers?

This lecture – the first part of a four-part survey of English Literature and Culture – will hopefully provide you with answers to these questions (and more). We will cover the period from the late sixteenth to the late seventeenth century, looking at important texts, authors, movements, and developments and place them in their historical and cultural contexts. Our starting point is the blossoming of (literary) culture at the court of Elizabeth I and the development of popular theatre. From there, we will move through Jacobean and Caroline England, the Civil War period, and the Restoration (of theatre). The lecture will focus in particular on theatrical cultures and drama, taking into consideration the works of William Shakespeare, Thomas Middleton, Ben Jonson, or John Fletcher, to name but a few; genres such as (revenge) tragedy, (city) comedy, tragicomedy, the court masque, and restoration comedy; as well as collaborative approaches to writing and performing drama in the early modern period.

Empfohlene Literatur
see syllabus (provided online and in session 01)

Englischsprachige Informationen:
Title:
Early Modern Literature and Culture (Survey 1/4)

Prerequisites
1. Module Allocation:
all modules including an obligatory/optional lecture (Vorlesung) for literature in
LA GS/HS/MS/RS/GY
BA Anglistik/Amerikanistik
MA English and American Studies
MA WiPäd
Erweiterungsbereich English and American Studies

2. (De)Registration:
in FlexNow!: 29.03.2024, 10:00-22.04.2023, 23:59
Guest auditors should first contact the lecturer

Contents
How serious did early modern poets take their sonnets? Was Shakespeare really ‘the greatest playwright’ in the early modern period? Why do we have so many portraits of Elizabeth I? And were there Renaissance women writers?

This lecture – the first part of a four-part survey of English Literature and Culture – will hopefully provide you with answers to these questions (and more). We will cover the period from the late sixteenth to the late seventeenth century, looking at important texts, authors, movements, and developments and place them in their historical and cultural contexts. Our starting point is the blossoming of (literary) culture at the court of Elizabeth I and the development of popular theatre. From there, we will move through Jacobean and Caroline England, the Civil War period, and the Restoration (of theatre). The lecture will focus in particular on theatrical cultures and drama, taking into consideration the works of William Shakespeare, Thomas Middleton, Ben Jonson, or John Fletcher, to name but a few; genres such as (revenge) tragedy, (city) comedy, tragicomedy, the court masque, and restoration comedy; as well as collaborative approaches to writing and performing drama in the early modern period.

Literature
see syllabus (provided online and in session 01)

Institution: Lehrstuhl für Englische Literaturwissenschaft

Hinweis für Web-Redakteure:
Wenn Sie auf Ihren Webseiten einen Link zu dieser Lehrveranstaltung setzen möchten, verwenden Sie bitte einen der folgenden Links:

Link zur eigenständigen Verwendung

Link zur Verwendung in Typo3

UnivIS ist ein Produkt der Config eG, Buckenhof