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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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British Cultural Studies in Historical Perspective - AAA132010E
Title: British Cultural Studies in Historical Perspective
Guaranteed by: Department of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures (21-UALK)
Faculty: Faculty of Arts
Actual: from 2021
Semester: winter
Points: 0
E-Credits: 3
Examination process: winter s.:
Hours per week, examination: winter s.:0/2, Ex [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (7)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
Key competences:  
State of the course: taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Level:  
Is provided by: AAA132010
Additional information: https://dl1.cuni.cz/course/view.php?id=1384
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
enabled for web enrollment
Guarantor: Mgr. Helena Znojemská, Ph.D.
Class: Exchange - 08.3 History
Exchange - 08.9 Others-Humanities
Exchange - 14.7 Anthropology
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download BrStsyllabus2023.pdf seminar syllabus Znojemská winter 2023 Mgr. Helena Znojemská, Ph.D.
Annotation
Last update: Mgr. Helena Znojemská, Ph.D. (21.09.2023)
N.B.:
THIS CODE WAS CREATED SPECIFICALLY FOR ERASMUS STUDENTS who need a grade for this course.
The course is only open to DALC incoming Erasmus students.



OBJECTIVES
This seminar aims to introduce the students to the transformations and developments which the major concepts of British cultural studies underwent throughout the ages. Working with a wide range of primary as well as secondary texts, fiction and non-fiction, we will examine the way in which the constituent factors of the notion of a unique English national identity and later British culture emerged in and were affected by interaction with other peoples and cultures.

MATERIAL AND PROGRAMME
1. Us and the Others I: Inventing the English nation
Danish invasions, Norman Conquest and the wars on the Continent, Elizabethan Age, Civil War. The images of England and Englishness in contemporary writings and in later histories of these periods.

i Venerable Bede: Coming of the Angles, Saxons & Jutes (Historia Ecclesiastica I/XV)
Alfred's Prose Preface to Pastoral Care
Battle of Brunanburh

ii Layamon: Brut (selection)
Alliterative Morte Arthure (selection)

iii Edmund Spenser: Faerie Queene (selection)

iv William Shakespeare: Richard II, 2/1
Henry V, Prologue, 1/2, 3/1, 3/5, 4/3; 3/2

v Gerard Winstanley: A New Year’s Gift for the Parliament and Army

vi Green, J.R.: A Short History of the English People (selection)
Walter Scott: Ivanhoe (selection)

2. Us and the Others II: Representing the neighbours
Wales, Scotland, Ireland – from slaves of the Anglo-Saxons to noble savages of the Romanticism and beyond.

i Venerable Bede: Historia Ecclesiastica I/XV, I/XXII, II/II

ii Edmund Spenser: A View of the Present State of Ireland (selection)

iii Walter Scott: Waverley(selection)

3. Us and the Others III: The new worlds
The English in the colonies

i Richard Hakluyt: The Principal Navigations of the English Nation (selection)
Thomas Morton: New English Canaan (selection)
John Winthrop: A Model of Christian Charity
William Bradford: Of Plymouth Plantation (selection)

ii Rudyard Kipling: In the Rukh, Selected Poems

ASSESSMENT
Credit requirements include active participation in class, 2 successful written assignments and a presentation illuminating the historical/conceptual context of a given text or some of its statements. The written assignments will have the form of a critical reading test, done over the week at home.

Please see the attached syllabus file for details of this year's course.
 
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