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Studies in Literary Genres (310-0-20)

Topic

The English Country and Far Beyond

Instructors

Helen F Thompson

Meeting Info

Harris Hall L28: Tues, Thurs 2:00PM - 3:20PM

Overview of class

If you've watched Saltburn or the Netflix series Bridgerton, you know that the English estate has undergone some cultural revision. No longer the opulent backdrop of period drama, the country house is the site of reckonings with the history of England's overseas empire, traffic in captive people, and flagrantly unequal distribution of wealth and power. In this class, we will trace the ongoing force of English literary refigurations of landed property initially tied to the largesse and power of the lord of the manor. We'll first explore the early modern country house poem, where the landed estate serves as a locus of pastoral abundance and naturalized social, architectural, and ecological order. But as we will discover, cracks appear in this vision. Moving forward, we encounter the idealized country house contested from the vantage of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century novels whose narrators and protagonists include servants, colonial subjects, and witnesses to family decadence financed by slavery. We'll turn to twentieth-century texts that claim the decaying country house as source of ghostly national nostalgia. Our final unit will engage public revision (in print, monuments, and activism) of the estate as "English Heritage." We will watch at least one episode of Bridgerton (Season 1, 2020) and the film Saltburn (2023) to assess recent popular re-representations of the landed estate.

Evaluation Method

Grades will be based on three short essays and one group presentation. Old major requirements: ICSP, pre-1830. New major requirements: GSE, pre-1830.

Class Materials (Required)

Country house poems may include: Aemelia Lanyer, "A Description of Cookham" (1611); Ben Jonson, "To Penshurst" (1616); Thomas Carew, "To Saxham" (1640); Robert Herrick, "A Panegyric to Sir Lewis Pemberton" (1648); Andrew Marvell, "Upon Appleton House" (1651); Abraham Cowley, "On the Queen's Repairing Somerset House" (1668); John Dryden, "To My Honoured Kinsman, John Driden, of Chesterton in the County of Huntingdon, Esquire" (1699); Anne Finch, "Upon My Lord Winchilsea's Converting the Mount in His Garden to a Terrace" (c. 1703); Mary Leapor, "Crumble-Hall" (1751); John Agard, "Upon Revisiting Mansfield Park" (2006).

Novels and short stories may include: Sarah Scott, Millenium Hall (1762); Maria Edgeworth, Castle Rackrent (1800); Jane Austen, Mansfield Park (1814); Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre (1847); Arthur Canon Doyle, "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips" (1891); Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca (1938); Jean Rhys, The Wide Sargasso Sea (1966); Isabel Colgate, The Shooting Party (1980); Kazuo Ishiguro, Remains of the Day (1989).

Class Attributes

Advanced Expression
Literature and Arts Foundational Discipline
Literature & Fine Arts Distro Area

Enrollment Requirements

Enrollment Requirements: Pre-registration -- Reserved for English students.