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ENGL 2560H: Romanticism and the Ideology of the Aesthetic
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Historical development of discourses of the "aesthetic" as they relate to the problem of "romanticism" as the name of a distinctive era in British and European literature and culture. Ideas about the autonomy of art in the period of the French and the Industrial Revolutions. Readings in Baumgarten, Kant, and Hegel; in Coleridge, W. Wordsworth, P. B. Shelley, and Keats. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560H - Romanticism and the Ideology of the Aesthetic
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ENGL 2560K: The Transatlantic Enlightenment
1.00 Credits
Brown University
A graduate seminar in literatures and cultures of the long 18th century in transatlantic context. Emphasis on print culture, the Black Atlantic, colonialism and slavery, as well as the American Revolution. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560K - The Transatlantic Enlightenment
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ENGL 2560L: The Victorian Novel
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An intensive seminar on the Victorian novel. The aim will be historically contextualized, theoretically informed interpretations of some leading examples of this complex literary form. Will focus on the role of the (British) novel, as distinct from the (American) short story, in rise of mass culture, and on recent formalist, stylistic, and historical approaches to the Victorian novel as a literary form. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560L - The Victorian Novel
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ENGL 2560N: American Literature and the Corporation
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An examination of 19th-century American literature in the context of the rapid growth of corporate forms in American economic, political, and social life from the mid-1830s through the turn of the century. How does literature participate in the debate this process of incorporation occasioned, and in what ways was it shaped by the process of incorporation occasioned, and in what ways was it shaped by the process? Readings include Hawthorne, Melville, Harper, Grant, Alcott, Crane, and Chestnutt. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560N - American Literature and the Corporation
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ENGL 2560Q: Victorian Fictions of Consciousness
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Victorian novels, Brontë through James, with an emphasis on the ways in which novels engage 19th-century theories of mind and psychology, looking at such central concepts as memory, will, sensation, and perception. Examines the importance of form and the subgenres of Victorian fiction (Bildungsroman, sensation novel, multiplot novel) in the construction of concepts of selfhood and consciousness. Attention also to the place of consciousness in Victorian and 20th-century theories of the novel. This course will also serve as an introduction to working on topics in science and literature. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560Q - Victorian Fictions of Consciousness
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ENGL 2560R: Romantic Dispossession: Subjectivity and Agency
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course examines the diverse arguments made by writers of the Romantic era concerning nonidentity, and focuses on the kinds of ethical, political, and aesthetic considerations that arise once identity is forfeited and dispossession is perceived as either a matter of self-discipline, the negative result of sympathy, a characteristic of literary culture, or a sign of melancholic loss. Enrollment limited to 15 graduate students. Undergraduate seniors will be admitted only with the permission of the instructor.
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ENGL 2560R - Romantic Dispossession: Subjectivity and Agency
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ENGL 2560T: The Realist Imagination
1.00 Credits
Brown University
A study of American literary realism. We will situate realism in the context of the realist turn in American artistic, political, legal, and economic enterprise from the Civil War to World War II, and measure the realist novel's relations to alternative aesthetic ideologies such as transcendentalism, regionalism, naturalism, and modernism. Authors to be considered include Emerson, DeForest, Grant, Twain, Cable, Chesnutt, Dreiser, Wharton, Cather, Anderson, Dos Passos, Faulkner, and Hurston. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560T - The Realist Imagination
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ENGL 2560U: Romanticism and the Ruins of Empire
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Representations of the ruins of ancient empires (Babylonian, Assyrian, Roman) in relation to British and French imperialism during the period we call "Romanticism." Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560V: Transatlantic Studies
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course offers a theoretical and historical examination of "translatlantic" models of literary analysis as an alternative to traditionally national ones. It will look at a recent criticism theorizing the field, including both literary and historical scholarship. Primary readings will be from Rowson, Equiano, Franklin, Emerson, and Twain, among others. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560V - Transatlantic Studies
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ENGL 2560W: The Figure of the Artist in the Nineteenth Century
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course considers the changing representations of the artist in the 19th century, as prophet, intellectual, professional, critic, genius, madman, aesthete, and social celebrity. Readings will focus on 19th-century novels, with select essays, reviews, and other nonfiction prose. Authors include George Eliot, Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, Arnold Bennett, George Gissing, H. G. Wells, George Bernard Shaw, Oscar Wilde. Enrollment limited to 15.
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ENGL 2560W - The Figure of the Artist in the Nineteenth Century
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