Module Information
Course Delivery
Delivery Type | Delivery length / details |
---|---|
Lecture | 20 x 1 Hour Lectures |
Seminar | 10 x 1 Hour Seminars |
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | 1 x 2000 word essay | 50% |
Semester Exam | 2 Hours Answer two questions on a two hour examination paper | 50% |
Supplementary Exam | 2 Hours RE-SIT EXAM (Answer two questions on a two hour examination paper) Resit examination | 50% |
Supplementary Assessment | RESUBMIT MISSED OR FAILED ESSAY | 50% |
Learning Outcomes
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
1. Demonstrate an informed critical understanding of selected examples of contemporary writing.
2. Relate these texts to contemporary cultural concerns and contexts.
3. Write about contemporary literary texts in a structured and disciplined manner.
Aims
EN10520 Contemporary Writing continues to be a popular option module in the department’s Part One provision. This revised version seeks to build upon its existing strengths whilst also making some improvements. Because of the nature of the topic itself, Contemporary Writing is likely to require periodic revision and updating on a fairly regular basis. The main change introduced in this revised version of the module is the reduction in the number of texts studied – from eight to four – allowing for more sustained and detailed engagements with the primary texts, their contexts, and a range of related critical ideas. Several lectures will provide students with focused advice on the modes of assessment used on the module, and there are also four thematic lectures to supplement the text-focused teaching delivery that is at the core of this module.
Brief description
1) narratives of trauma and testimony; and
2) ideas of place and environment.
Other topics of discussion will include: literature and apocalypse; national identity; gender and sexuality; form and experiment. In this way, the module will enable students to engage with a variety of topics and concepts that they will encounter at a higher level in Part Two.
Content
Seminar: Ian McEwan, ‘Only love and then oblivion’; Don DeLillo, ‘In the ruins of the future’
Week 2: McCarthy, The Road 1; McCarthy, The Road 2
Seminar: Cormac McCarthy, The Road
Week 3: McCarthy, The Road 3; Writing critical essays
Seminar: Cormac McCarthy, The Road
Week 4: Trauma and narrative; Enright, The Underground Railroad 1
Seminar: Colston Whitehead, The Underground Railroad
Week 5: Enright, The Underground Railroad 2
Seminar: Colston Whitehead, The Underground Railroad
Week 6: Poetry and environment; Oswald, Dart 1
Seminar: Alice Oswald, Dart
Week 7: Oswald, Dart 2; Oswald, Dart 3
Seminar: Alice Oswald, Dart
Week 8: Nature writing; Macfarlane, The Wild Places 1
Seminar: Robert Macfarlane, The Wild Places
Week 9: Macfarlane, The Wild Places 2; Macfarlane, The Wild Places 3
Seminar: Robert Macfarlane, The Wild Places
Week 10: The future of contemporary writing; Assessment advice (exams)
Seminar: Exam revision workshop
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Application of Number | n/a |
Communication | Written - developing a sustained critical argument Oral - group discussions adn seminar presentations (not assessed) |
Improving own Learning and Performance | Independent research and reading |
Information Technology | Use of word-processing packages, use of Blackboard and other e-resources to research and access course documents and other materials |
Personal Development and Career planning | Increased critical self-reflection and the development of transferable, ICT, communication and research skills |
Problem solving | By evaluative analysis and critical skills |
Research skills | By independent research and synthesizing information in an evaluative argument |
Subject Specific Skills | Reading, writing and researching skills involved in the interrogation of literary texts, and the conceptual/theoretical analysis of works of imaginative literature in relation to a range of other non- literary texts |
Team work | Group work in seminars and/or through the preparation of paired presentations for seminars |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 4