HEGRBTV03U CANCELLED Tværfagligt valgfag, emne 3: European Romanticism with a Global Perspective

Årgang 2021/2022
Engelsk titel

CANCELLED Interdisciplinary Elective Subject, topic 3: European Romanticism with a Global Perspective

Kursusindhold

CANCELLED

 

This course will explore the literatures of Romanticism, which arose in the wake of the revolutions in America and France. The Romantic era was not only an upheaval age of revolutions in a political sense, but also in terms of on the individual and psychological level. Romanticism ushered in a fascination with transgression: religious, social, sexual, aesthetic, and mental. As a reaction to the Enlightenment, Romantic literature invented new forms to express various states of mind: vision, dream, melancholy, and horror - both in prose and poems. One avenue of exploration was the supernatural, which manifested itself in for example in the novel Frankenstein. The new licence to write poetry also included women, colonial subjects and former slaves: The enslaved African-American poet Phyllis Wheatley used her poetry to gain her emancipation. We will engage with this recently recovered dimension of a global romanticism. The course will thus give an overview of the Romantic movement in primarily Britain and Germany consisting of young, experimenting and later canonized authors and texts, including S.T. Coleridge’s visionary and opium-inspired dreams,  P.B. Shelley’s anti-establishment writing, Mary Wollstonecraft’s remarkably early feminism, William Wordsworth’s nature poetry, William Blake’s fascinating combination of pictures and texts, as well as Jane Austen’s modern prose, Goethe’s cosmopolitanism, the eccentric and extreme Romanticism of Novalis, Heinrich von Kleist, and E.T.A. Hoffmann and not least of the ironic philosopher Friedrich Schlegel. It will also show how the discourse of Romanticism travelled around the globe.

 

Topics:

Historical Background (revolutions and their aftermath)

Central Concepts of Romanticism

The Gothic and the Supernatural

National/transnational

Romantic Love and Gender Politics

Imagination and the Child

Romantic Nature and Ecology

Romanticism and Transcendence (Opium, Hallucination, Dreams)

Romanticism and Global Imagination

Assigned texts (provisional):

Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

Jane Austen, Persuasion

E.T.A. Hoffmann, ‘Der Sandmann’

Heinrich von Kleist; ‘Die Marquise von O’

Ludwig Tieck, ’Der blonde Eckbert’

Excerpts from Mary Wolstonecraft, Friedrich Schlegel, Karoline von Günderrode

Poetry by William Blake, Phyllis Wheatley, P.B. Shelley, William Wordsworth, Novalis, Johann Wolfgang v. Goethe, Adam Oehlenschläger.

Course:
The course is co-taught by the three main facilitators, but other members of the teaching staff are invited to present aspects of Romanticism within their field. We will include a topic on Romanticism in Southern Europe (France, Spain, and Italy), for which we invite colleagues to present.

Assignments:
Exploring themes in language and texts and how these may be affected by historical conditions or events.
Writing exercises on central concepts and motifs
Analyses of Romanticism's visions of global locations, for example the Orient and Australia
Discussion of theory to be used in a comparative perspective
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