SJ5003 - Victorians to Moderns (2024/25)
Module specification | Module approved to run in 2024/25 | ||||||||||||||||
Module title | Victorians to Moderns | ||||||||||||||||
Module level | Intermediate (05) | ||||||||||||||||
Credit rating for module | 30 | ||||||||||||||||
School | School of Art, Architecture and Design | ||||||||||||||||
Total study hours | 300 | ||||||||||||||||
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Assessment components |
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Running in 2024/25(Please note that module timeslots are subject to change) |
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Module summary
Victorians to Moderns forms the central section of the chronological spine of English Literature modules that also includes Romantics to Victorians and Moderns to Contemporaries. It examines the transformations of English literature and culture from the late 19th to the mid-20th century. Through the study of literature, philosophy, criticism and the arts, the module develops students’ critical understanding of cultural context and formal innovation in the English literary tradition. The module develops and extends debates encountered in Romantics to Victorians and introduces intellectual and critical debates proper to Modernism. The module is taught by weekly sessions comprising lecture and seminar, supplemented by tutorials, and is assessed by a variety of written coursework.
Victorians to Moderns aims to: develop students’ skills of critical analysis through the study of exemplary works from the period 1880-1940; enhance students’ competency in using academic criticism to develop their own critical practice; provide a critical account of social, political and cultural developments in the period as a framework for students’ understanding of the role of the imaginative writer in the period; engage students in complex critical and cultural debates that were central to the development of both literature and other art-forms during the period, in Britain and internationally.
Prior learning requirements
Completion and pass (120 credits) of previous level.
Available for Study Abroad? YES
Syllabus
The module will broadly follow the chronological development of literary and artistic culture from the 1880s to WWII. The discussion of socio-historical, intellectual and aesthetic developments will be conducted through close study of primary texts as well as related academic criticism (LO1/LO2). Texts studied will include fiction, poetry and drama as well as examples of other artforms, such as painting and music (LO4). Topics will typically include Naturalism and the Social Sciences; Psychoanalysis; Spiritualism and the Occult; Decadence and Aestheticism; Technology and the City; Art, Manifesto and Revolt; the New Woman; War (LO3). Major authors to be studied will typically include Thomas Hardy, Oscar Wilde, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, Katherine Mansfield, D.H. Lawrence, T.S. Eliot, W. B. Yeats, as well representatives of American and European modernism.
Balance of independent study and scheduled teaching activity
Scheduled teaching ensures that independent study is effective and addresses the learning outcomes and assessment tasks. Students are expected to, and have the opportunity to, continue with their studies outside of scheduled classes. There will be a range of learning strategies deployed and individual learning styles will be accommodated. The module’s learning outcomes, its contents and delivery, have been scrutinised and will be regularly reviewed to ensure an inclusive approach to pedagogic practice.
The module and course utilise the University’s blended learning platform to support and reinforce learning, to foster peer-to-peer communication and to facilitate tutorial support for students. Reflective learning is promoted through assessment items and interim formative feedback points that ask students to reflect on their progress, seek help where they identify the opportunity for improvement in learning strategies and outcomes, and make recommendations to themselves for future development. Throughout the module, students build a body of work, including reflections on progress and achievement.
The School’s programme of employability events and embedded work-related learning within the curriculum supports students’ personal development planning. Through these initiatives, students are increasingly able, as they progress from year to year, to understand the professional environment of their disciplines, the various opportunities available to them, and how to shape their learning according to their ambitions.
Learning outcomes
On successful completion of this module students will be able to:
Subject specific skills
LO1 demonstrate skills of close formal textual analysis across a variety of genres;
LO2 apply argumentative structure to the analysis of primary and secondary texts;
Knowledge and understanding
LO3 identify and analyse major themes and debates of the literature of the period 1880 to 1940 in relation to historical contexts;
Cognitive intellectual abilities
LO4 critically evaluate or creatively respond to cultural production in the period across literary and artistic genres.