Fall 2023 English GR6282 section 001

New Classicism

Call Number 11909
Day & Time
Location
T 12:10pm-2:00pm
612 Philosophy Hall
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Lauren E Robertson
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

This graduate seminar is an investigation and interrogation of the English Renaissance. It will offer grounding in the nineteenth-century emergence of the Renaissance as a cultural and conceptual category, as well as the prevailing scholarly understanding of how sixteenth-century writers, poets, and playwrights negotiated their estrangement from the classical past. But the course will also aim, more urgently, to forge new pathways in classical reception studies. To what uses, we will ask, did English writers put their classical sources, and what imagined ideas about antiquity did they generate as a result? How did that engagement with classical sources shape emergent ideas about gender, race, and class? And though the course will center on the literary production of late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth century England, it will also cast a wide geographical net, seeking out the Renaissances and classical pasts that have been neglected in the focus on the European revival of ancient Greece and Rome. Attending to a variety of critical methodologies, this seminar will bring together a range of literary forms, including drama, epic, poetry, and civic spectacle, from a range of places, including England, Italy, and the Ottoman Empire.  

Web Site Vergil
Department English and Comparative Literature
Enrollment 17 students (18 max) as of 11:07AM Wednesday, May 1, 2024
Subject English
Number GR6282
Section 001
Division Interfaculty
Campus Morningside
Note Application required.
Section key 20233ENGL6282G001