EL 405.01: Victorian Poetry and ProseFall 2017
Hande Tekdemir
Office: TB 529 Office Hours: Mon. 14:30-15:30
d. 15:00-16:00
& by appointment
Course Objectives:
Focusing on poetry, prose and a novel written during Victorian England, we will pursue two main objectives:
1. To be acquainted with the work of major Victorian writers,
2. To look at Victorian culture and ideology through the lenses of literature.
For our first goal, we will examine works by canonical writers and poetssuch Tennyson, Arnold, Browning, Ruskin, and Gaskell, which reflect the socio-cultural issues and artistic pursuits of the period.For our second goal, we will examine how some of the important developments of “the long nineteenth century” such as industrialism, urbanization, imperialism,emergenceof the middle class, increasing commercialization, developing labor movements, initial challenges against gender roles and distinctions, are reflected, confirmed or contested in the literary texts of the period.
As we pursue both goals, I’d like to be able to introduce you with the canon as much as what is pushed outside the mainstream culture. To that end, we will look at some examples of street literature, discuss the “sensational” aspect of the Oscar Wilde trials for the Victorian culture, and ponder over the ongoing influence of Victorian culture in TV series.
Evaluation and Requirements:
Class participation% 10
(5 points for regular attendance and 5 points for meaningful and relevant participation in class discussion)
Reading Quizzes% 20 (no make-up for quizzes)
Midterm paper% 30
Final exam (cumulative)% 40
Schedule of Readings:
Course Reader is available at the library copy center.
North and South is available for purchase at the Bookstore.
Week 1:
Sept. 18Introduction
Sept. 20“Victorian Age” in The Longman Anthology
Industrialism: Progress or Decline?
Week 2:Perspectives ON the Wrking Class
Sept 25-27Prose:From The Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels
From The Cond. of the Working Class in England in 1844 by Engels
Poem: “The Cry of Children” by Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Week 3:Perspectives OF the Working Class
Oct. 2-4“Street Ballads and Broadsides: The foundation of a class culture” by Martha Vicinus (article)
examples from street literature, selection from the Reader Quiz 1
The Victorian Social Novel
Week 4:The Victorian Novel and Serialization
Oct. 9-11North and Southby Elizabeth Gaskell
Week 5:
Oct. 16-18cont. North and SouthQuiz 2
Week 6:
Oct. 23-25cont. North and South
The “Other” Victorians: Dissenting Voices of the Fin de Siècle
Week 7: The Woman Question
Oct. 30-Nov. 1selected readings from the Course Reader
Week 8:Victorian underworld, sensation and scandal
Nov. 6Sex Labor in Victorian EnglandMIDTERM PAPER DUE
Nov. 8Oscar Wilde trials
Poems: “Hermaphrodite”by A. C. Swinburne, “In Praise of Shame,” “Two Loves” by Lord Alfred Douglas
Week 9:
Nov. 13Michel Foucault, “We Other Victorians”
Nov. 15Crime, Detection and the Victorian Underworld:Jack the Ripper and
Sherlock Holmes
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, “A Scandal in Bohemia”Quiz 3
Victorian Art andCulture & The Society of Spectacle
Week 10:
Nov. 20-22Gothic art: John Ruskin, from “The Nature of Gothic”77-95, end of 101-109
The Great Exhibition[1]
Victorian Poetry: Nostalgia for the Past
Week 11:Victorian Quest and Melancholy: Alfred Lord Tennyson & Matthew Arnold
Nov. 27-29Poems: “Ulysses,” “Lotus Eaters,” The Lady of Shalott” by Tennyson
“The Scholar Gypsy” by Matthew ArnoldQuiz 4
Week 12:The Grotesque: Robert Browning
Dec. 4-6“The Soliloquy of the Spanish Cloister” “Andrea Del Sarto”
Algernon Swinburne “Leper”
Week 13:Neo-Victorianism
Dec. 11-13selected examples from TV series (student-lead class discussion)
Suggested Reading:
Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Empire 1875-1914.
Ronald Hyam, Britain’s Imperial Century 1815-1914.
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist Manifesto
Wolfgang Schivelbusch,The railway journey: the industrialization of time and space in the 19th Century
D.A. Miller, The Novel and the Police
Martha Vicinus, The industrial Muse: a study of 19th century British working-class literature
Henry Mayhew, London Labor and the London Poor
Martha Vicinus, Suffer and be still: Women in the Victorian age
Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar. The Madwoman in the Attic.
Suggested websites, films, and documentaries:
The Young Victoria, 2009.
Mrs. Brown, 1997.
Seven Wonders of the Industrial World, 2003. BBC documentary in 7 parts.
The Children who Built Victorian Britain, BBC documentary.
North and South, 2004. TV serial;
A History of Britain [2000]by Simon Schama. BBC documentary in 15 episodes. Watch the two episodes: “Victoria and her sisters” and “The Empire of good intentions.”
1
[1]Poems:“Hiram Powers’ Greek Slave” by Elizabeth B. Browning,
“Opening of the Indian and Col. Exhibition by the Queen” by Tennyson,
“Mr. Maloney’s Account of the Crystal Palace” by Thackeray