General information
Course type | AMUPIE |
Module title | Introduction to literary studies |
Language | English |
Module lecturer | dr hab. Paweł Stachura, prof. UAM |
Lecturer's email | pawels@amu.edu.pl |
Lecturer position | Professor |
Faculty | Faculty of English |
Semester | 2023/2024 (summer) |
Duration | 30 |
ECTS | 2 |
USOS code | 15-ITLS-AMU-PIE-11 |
Timetable
Collegium Heliodori Święcicki, Aula, Tuesday, 16:45-18:15
https://planer.wa.amu.edu.pl/pl/panel/home/group/114
Module aim (aims)
To familiarize students with basic terminology in literary criticism and research.
Pre-requisites in terms of knowledge, skills and social competences (where relevant)
This is entry-level course. Students need to attend a lecture in English, and write brief-essay assignments of about one page per week.
Syllabus
Week 1: Types of verse 1
Week 2: Types of verse 2
Week 3: Schemes in poetry 1
Week 4: Schemes in poetry 2
Week 5: Tropes in poetry 1: survey of figurative language
Week 6: Tropes in poetry 2: survey of figurative language
Week 8: Tropes in prose: plot, action, character
Week 9: Tropes in prose: setting, narrative voice
Week 10: Classical genre system
Week 11: Modern genres
Week 12: Hermeneutics
Week 13: Theories of interpretation
Week 14: Theories of interpretation
Week 15:Final test
Reading list
Ernst Robert Curtius European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages, tran. W.R. Trask (Princeton,
New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1973).
John G. Cawelti, Adventure, Mystery, and Romance: Formula Stories as Art and Popular Culture.
(1976)
Frye, Northrop. Anatomy of Criticism. Cambridge University Press, 1957.
Literary Criticism and Theory: The Greeks to the Present, ed. R. Con Davis and L. Finke (New York
and London: Longman, 1989), pp. 632-647.
Mikhail Bakhtin, “Epic and Novel. Toward a Methodology for the Study of the Novel,” in The Dialogic
Imagination: Four Essays, ed. M. Holquist, trans. C. Emerson and M. Holquist (Austin:
University of Texas Press, 1996), pp. 3-40.
Aristotle, Poetics, in Literary Criticism and Theory: The Greeks to the Present, ed. R. Con Davis and
- Finke (New York and London: Longman, 1989), pp. 60-83 (esp. chapters 6-17, pp. 64-73).