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Course, academic year 2024/2025
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Literary Theory - AAA220400
Title: Teorie literatury
Guaranteed by: Department of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures (21-UALK)
Faculty: Faculty of Arts
Actual: from 2011
Semester: summer
Points: 0
E-Credits: 2
Examination process: summer s.:
Hours per week, examination: summer s.:1/1, C [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (unknown)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: not taught
Language: Czech
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Is provided by: AAA100400
Guarantor: prof. PhDr. Martin Procházka, CSc.
Interchangeability : AAA100400, AAA110400
Schedule   Noticeboard   
Annotation -
OBJECTIVES
To introduce students to the main features of English and American aesthetic and literary theories and to the major developments in literary criticism from the Renaissance to the present time. To give a survey of the most important theories and concepts of antiquity (Aristotle, Plato, Horace, Longinus) used in later theoretical and critical discourses.

PROCEDURE
The lecture starts with a survey of relevant works of ancient Greek and Roman aesthetics, rhetoric and poetics (Plato, Plotinus, Aristotle, Horace, Longinus) and concentrates on the explanation of major categories and concepts taken over by modern (and postmodern) authors. Then it discusses in some detail Renaissance notions of poetry and rhetoric (Sir Philip Sidney, George Puttenham). It explains Classicist, Augustan and Neo-classical opinions of the author, the style and the unity of the work of art (John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Dr Samuel Johnson), and deals with Romantic theories of imagination, metre, poetic language and ideas of the function of poetry (William Wordsworth, S.T.Coleridge, William Hazlitt, P.B.Shelley). Victorian views of the social function of art, cultural development, aesthetic value and the perception of art (Thomas Carlyle, Matthew Arnold, John Ruskin, William Morris, Walter Pater) are also analyzed. In 20th-century criticism the focus is on the aesthetics and poetics of the New Criticism in Britain and the USA (I.A.Richards, William Empson, J.C.Ransom, Percy Lubbock, W.K.Wimsatt), the influence of structuralism mediated by the Prague School (Roman Jakobson, René Wellek, Jan Mukařovský), the structuralist nature of recent archetypal and mythological criticism (Northrop Frye), and the influence of French Structuralism (Roland Barthes).

ASSESSMENT
The lecture is geared to the seminar Literary Theory (111. Literární teorie). Students must answer correctly at least sixty percent of the questions in the final test which includes topics covered in the lecture (Literární teorie / Main Trends in Anglo?American Aesthetic Thought and Literary Criticism) or the course book (Literary Theory. A Historical Introduction), and in the handouts (available in digital form).
Last update: UAAZNOJE (16.07.2007)
Literature - Czech

Abrams, M.H., The Mirror and the Lamp (New York: Norton, 1960)

Wellek, René - Warren, Austin, Theory of Literature (London: Jonathan Cape, 1949)

The Princeton Handbook of Literary Terms (Princeton University Press, 2001)

Ronberg, Gert, A Way With Words (London, New York: Routledge, 1992)

Hobsbaum, Philip, Metre, Rhythm and Verse Form (London, New York: Routledge, 1996)

Průvodce po literární teorii 20. stol. (Praha: Panorama, 1988)

Slovník literární teorie (Praha: ČS, 1974)

Procházka, Martin, Literary The­ory. An Historical Introduction (skripta FF UK, 2007)

Last update: UAAZNOJE (27.05.2008)
Teaching methods - Czech

přednáška + seminář

Last update: UAAZNOJE (27.05.2008)
Syllabus - Czech

seminář:

Week 1. Introduction

Week 2-3. Antiquity

2. reading - Plato: Phaedrus (selected passages)

presentation - Plato: Phaedrus, Ion, Republic ch. X

3. reading - Aristotle: Poetics (selected passages)

presentation - Aristotle: Poetics

Week 4-5. From Antiquity to Renaissance: the language of poetry

4. Development of rhetorics. Tropes / schemes, metaphor / metonymy, conceit / allegory / symbol

handout #1

5. reading & presentation - Sidney: Apologie of Poetrie

Week 6-7. Classicism

6. reading - Dryden: Essay on Dramatic Poesy

7. reading & presentation - Pope: Essay on Criticism

Week 8.-9. Romanticism

8. reading & presentation - Wordsworth: Preface to "Lyrical Ballads",

Coleridge: Biographia Literaria (selected chapters)

9. presentation - Shelley: Defence of Poetry

Week 10. Metre, Rhyme, Free Verse

handout #2

Week 11-12. New Criticism, Structuralism

11. presentation - Brooks: The Well-Wrought Urn (chapters I, XI)

Mukařovský: Studie z estetiky (selected chapters, pp.85-89, 89-108)

12. presentation - Wellek, Warren: Theory of Literature (chapters 12, 18)

reading & presentation - Barthes: Mythologies (Wine and Milk, Myth Today)

Week 13. Narrative Strategies

handout #3

Last update: UAAZNOJE (27.05.2008)
 
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