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DELETED: Nineteenth-Century Realisms: Race, Class, and Gender (4cr)

Course unit code: C-10088-FH00EB66

General information


Credits
4 cr
Teaching language
English
Institution
University of Eastern Finland

Objective

Learning outcomes: At the end of the course the students will - comprehend the main features and the complexities of 19th-century fiction in Britain and the United States - understand the meaning of the conventions of 19th-century fiction - be familiar with the social and cultural context of 19th-century fiction and understand the importance of race, class, and gender to the literature of the period Generic competences: ethics, internationality, critical thinking, identification and development of expertise, interaction and communication The course develops the following work life skills: - Language skills, knowledge of socio-cultural contexts related to specific countries, multidisciplinarity, argumentation skills, research skills, meaning-making, time management and prioritization skills, systematic thinking, managing large entities

Content

This course provides an overview of nineteenth-century realism in English literature. The course will focus on the discursive links between the fiction and its socio-cultural contexts.

Qualifications

FH00EB59 Trends in Anglophone Literatures (1 ECTS) and FH00EB60 Anglophone Literatures: Text and Context (4 ECTS) (or 2130346 Anglophone Literatures: Cultures and Contexts) or 2130357 Trends in Anglophone Literatures (1 ECTS) and 2130358 Anglophone Literatures: Text and Context (4 ECTS) (or 2130346 Anglophone Literatures: Cultures and Contexts)

Materials

Jane Austen, Mansfield Park (1814) Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre (1847) Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness (1899/1902) Mark Twain, Pudd’nhead Wilson (1893-4) Stephen Crane, Maggie, A Girl of the Streets (1893) Edith Wharton, Xingu (1916) ca. 1200 pages

Further information

Time: 1st year of study, spring term Campus: Joensuu Language of tuition: English. Offering data: students of English language and culture. The course is open to exchange students.

Execution methods

Lectures

Accomplishment methods

Modes of study: Lectures (14 h); independent study (108 h) Evaluation criteria: Written examination (50 %) and an essay of 1800-2000 words (50 %). Both will be graded 0-5.

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