Module overview
Aims and Objectives
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge and Understanding
Having successfully completed this module, you will be able to demonstrate knowledge and understanding of:
- the key critical approaches, both historically-specific and trans-historical, that have been applied to the study of early US literature
- the creation and development of the United States, from British colony to independent republic
- the role of gender in the construction of early American identities
- the relation between race, nation, slavery and liberty in this early period of US history
- the construction and experience of landscape
- the role of literature and the arts in this process
- the distinctions between a range of literary, visual and historical sources
Subject Specific Practical Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- develop analysis and discussion based on a range of sources, both published and electronic
- employ research skills and initiative in identifying additional relevant source material.
- read a variety of texts in an historically relevant way
- use electronic sources and a variety of library holdings effectively
Subject Specific Intellectual and Research Skills
Having successfully completed this module you will be able to:
- make use of contemporary critical writing to inform your thinking about the issues raised in the module.
- contrast different historical, political and theoretical models employed by eighteenth-century and modern writers when engaging with the American Revolution and the new nation
- analyse the pressures and influences which shaped the construction of the American republic
- draw upon the different kinds of understanding generated by a range of literary and non-literary texts
Syllabus
Learning and Teaching
Teaching and learning methods
Type | Hours |
---|---|
Preparation for scheduled sessions | 110 |
Completion of assessment task | 82 |
Wider reading or practice | 24 |
Lecture | 24 |
Follow-up work | 24 |
Teaching | 12 |
Seminar | 24 |
Total study time | 300 |
Resources & Reading list
Textbooks
Lawson-Peebles, Robert (1988). Landscape and written expression in revolutionary America : the world turned upside down. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Warner, William (2013). Protocols of Liberty: Communication Innovation and the American Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Samuels, Shirley (1996). Romances of the republic : women, the family, and violence in the literature of the early American nation. New York: Oxford University Press.
Paul Giles (2001). Transatlantic Insurrections: British Culture and the Formation of American Literature, 1760-1860. Philadelphia: Universiry of Pennsylvania Press.
Carla Mulford, ed. Early American Writings. Oxford.
Andrews, William L. et al (ed.). Journeys in New Worlds: Early American Women's Narratives. Univ. of Wisconsin Press.
Shields, David S. (1990). Oracles of Empire: Poetry, Politics, and Commerce in British America, 1690-1750. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Wood , Gordon S. (2009). Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789-1815. Oxford: OUP.
Schweitzer, Ivy (2006). Perfecting friendship : politics and affiliation in early American literature. University of North Carolina Press.
Hewitt ,Elizabeth (2004). Correspondence and American literature, 1770-1865. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Warner, Michael (1992). The Letters of the Republic: Publication and the Public Sphere in Eighteenth-Century America. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard UP.
Armstrong, Nancy, and Leonard Tennenhouse (1992). he imaginary puritan : literature, intellectual labor, and the origins of personal life. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Tennenhouse, Leonard (2007). The importance of feeling English: American literature and the British diaspora, 1750-1850. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Dorothy Z. Baker (2007). America's Gothic Fiction : The Legacy of Magnalia Christi Americana. Ohio State University Press.
Eberwein, Jane Donahue (ed.) (1986). Early American Poetry: Selections from Bradstreet, Taylor, Dwight, Frenea & Bryant. Univ. of Wisconsin Press.
Assessment
Assessment strategy
The assessed essay requires independent use of online and other archives to explore life in the early United States. You will choose your own selection of documents and images to provide a case study and analysis of American life, drawn from themes including cities (Boston, Philadelphia, New York), rural life and the frontier, the rhetoric of freedom, the experience of slavery, Revolution and Loyalism, scientific and geographical exploration, women’s lives, views from abroad. Written feedback on assignments will be accompanied by individual consultation.Summative
This is how we’ll formally assess what you have learned in this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Essay | 50% |
Timed Assignment | 50% |
Referral
This is how we’ll assess you if you don’t meet the criteria to pass this module.
Method | Percentage contribution |
---|---|
Resubmit assessments | 100% |
Repeat Information
Repeat type: Internal & External