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ENGL 1360B: Inventing Britain
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Focuses on the internal colonization of the British Isles as represented by chronicle histories, drama, masques, and epic and lyric poetry: How do the English define themselves as a center striving to incorporate the British periphery? Authors may include Spenser, Shakespeare, King James I, Bacon, Jonson, Milton, and Marvel.
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ENGL 1360B - Inventing Britain
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ENGL 1360C: Language and Form in Shakespearean Studies
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Shakespeare's poems and plays are a working dictionary of early modern English and an inventory of the possibilities of formal invention in early modern culture. How can we reach a historically informed awareness of form and formality in Shakespeare? What is the history of formalism in Shakespearean studies? What new modes of inquiry issue from questions of form?
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ENGL 1360C - Language and Form in Shakespearean Studies
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ENGL 1360D: Medieval Manuscript Studies: Paleography, Codicology, and Interpretation
1.00 Credits
Brown University
How to read a medieval manuscript. Students will learn to transcribe and date 5th- through 16th-century scripts in Old and Middle English and some Latin texts, and will learn about interpretive methods. Prior course work in Middle English recommended, and acquaintance with Latin and/or Old English and/or Old French and/or medieval Spanish helpful.
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ENGL 1360D - Medieval Manuscript Studies: Paleography, Codicology, and Interpretation
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ENGL 1360F: Quest, Vision, Diaspora: Medieval Journey Narratives
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Medieval texts explored ideas of self, love, rite-of-passage, spirituality, and group identity through narratives of travel, both imagined and real. We will read romance quests that foray to fairylands and wastelands, visionary journeys to hell, pilgrimages of self discovery, an epic exodus that founds King Arthur's nation, and a 14th-century round-the-world travelogue. Chaucer, Malory, Kempe, Mandeville, Layamon, Anonymous. Middle English readings. Not open to first-year students. Enrollment limited.
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ENGL 1360F - Quest, Vision, Diaspora: Medieval Journey Narratives
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ENGL 1360H: Seminar in Old English Literature
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course will offer a thorough introduction to the earliest period of English language and literature, and allow students, by the end of the course, to read and appreciate a language that is both intriguingly foreign and importantly familiar. We will start with an extensive coverage of grammar and syntax, before reading short texts, and Old English poetry, including excerpts from Beowulf. Enrollment limited to 20. Not open to first-year students.
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ENGL 1360H - Seminar in Old English Literature
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ENGL 1360J: Literatures of Medieval England
1.00 Credits
Brown University
In the multilingual society of medieval England, the choice to write in English was culturally loaded. We read, in their cultural contexts, lyrics, romances, debate poems, dream visions, Breton lays, Arthurian histories, women's devotional writings, and saints' legends written in Middle English between 1100 and 1485. Readings are in Middle English. Not open to freshmen. LILE
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ENGL 1360J - Literatures of Medieval England
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ENGL 1360K: Shakespeare and Company
1.00 Credits
Brown University
What makes Shakespeare different from Marlowe or Jonson, Middleton or Webster? They all belonged to a community of actors and playwrights who competed for audiences in a fledgling entertainment industry. Reading Shakespeare's plays in tandem with those of his contemporaries, we will consider the genres, sources, styles and conventions they shared, and the issues that concerned them.
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ENGL 1360K - Shakespeare and Company
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ENGL 1360M: Spenser, Milton, and the Politics of the English Epic
1.00 Credits
Brown University
We will read the literary and political writings of England's two major authors of epic -- Spenser and Milton -- assessing their investment in contemporary debates about nation and conquest, rule and liberty, and sexuality and selfhood. Along with the major poems, we will read these authors' shorter literary and political writings.
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ENGL 1360M - Spenser, Milton, and the Politics of the English Epic
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ENGL 1360N: Shakespeare and European Culture
1.00 Credits
Brown University
How do Shakespeare's works embody and transform the cultures of Europe? What is his relationship to ancient Greece and Rome? To the moral and political philosophies of the sixteenth century? To contemporary literary fashion?
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ENGL 1360N - Shakespeare and European Culture
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ENGL 1360O: The Ties that Bind: Domestic Friction and Renaissance Drama
1.00 Credits
Brown University
From revenge plays to domestic tragedies, family is a value to kill and die for in Renaissance drama. This course considers the cultural pressures such violence responds to, the contaminations it guards against, and explores the political life of these violent domestic affairs. Works by Kyd, Shakespeare, Heywood, Webster, and Middleton. Not open to first-year students. Enrollment limited.
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ENGL 1360O - The Ties that Bind: Domestic Friction and Renaissance Drama
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