Module Identifier | EN30530 | ||||||||||||||
Module Title | MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE WRITING | ||||||||||||||
Academic Year | 2003/2004 | ||||||||||||||
Co-ordinator | Dr Claire E Jowitt | ||||||||||||||
Semester | Semester 1 | ||||||||||||||
Other staff | Mrs Carol M Marshall, Dr Elizabeth J Oakley-Brown, Mr Michael J Smith | ||||||||||||||
Pre-Requisite | EN10320 , EN10420 | ||||||||||||||
Course delivery | Lecture | 30 Hours (30 x one hour lectures) | |||||||||||||
Seminars / Tutorials | 10 Hours Seminar. (10 x 1 hour seminars) | ||||||||||||||
Assessment |
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Lectures and seminars
The lectures (three per week) are arranged in three independent but thematically interwoven strands (1-3 above). Strand 1 will run throughout the semester (1 lecture per week) in parallel with strand 2 and 3 which will run sequentially (Strand 2 will be two lectures per week in weeks 1-5, strand 3 will be 2 lectures per week in weeks 6-10). The weekly seminar will provide opportunities to discuss texts from all three strands. Each seminar tutor will present a seminar programme including texts from each of the strands.
Assessment
Assessment is by one x 2,500 word essay on poetry from the years 1580-1630 (strand 2); and by a three-hour, two question examination paper. In the essay, students will be expected to demonstrate some breadth of reading (as explained in the rubric of the question paper). In the examination, students will be expected to answer one question from the two remaining strands (1) late medieval texts from the years 1380-1430, and (3) plays from the years 1580-1630. At least one examination answer should involve comparison of two or more texts. The essay will contribute 25% of the module mark and the examination will contribute 75%.
Reading list
Medieval:
Knight's Tale and Miller's Tale. If you bought an edition of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales for the Part I Genre module, it will have these in it. If you didn't, then the following edition is recommended:
Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales: The First Fragment, ed. Michael Alexander (Penguin)
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, ed. & trans. W.R.J. Barron (Manchester UP)
The Book of Margery Kempe, tr. Barry Windeatt (Penguin)
Everyman and Medieval Miracle Plays, ed. A.C. Cawley (Everyman)
Poetry:
Renaissance Literature: An Anthology, ed, Michael Payne and John Hunter (Blackwell)
Drama:
Christopher Marlowe, Tamburlaine. Texts of both parts contained in Marlowe, Doctor Faustus and Other Plays (World's Classics) as recommended for EN10320 The Study of English, last year. If you need a separate edition, the best (and most reasonably priced) is: Marlowe, Tamburlaine the Great, ed. J.S. Cunningham and Eithne Henson (Revels Student Editions; Manchester UP)
William Shakespeare, Henry IV, Part I, ed. David Bevington (World's Classics)
William Shakespeare, Coriolanus, ed. Lee Bliss (New Cambridge Shakespeare)
John Webster, The Duchess of Malfi, ed. Elizabeth M. Brennan (New Mermaid)
Thomas Middleton and William Rowley, The Changeling, ed. Joost Daalder (New Mermaid)
This module is at CQFW Level 6