123252 AR Literature Course - Literature 1/2 (MA)British/Irish/New English & Cultural Studies (2018W)
Virginia Woolf and the Life of Writing
Continuous assessment of course work
Labels
in preparation
Registration/Deregistration
Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).
- Registration is open from Sa 08.09.2018 00:00 to Tu 18.09.2018 23:59
- Deregistration possible until We 31.10.2018 23:59
Details
max. 25 participants
Language: English
Lecturers
Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N
- Thursday 11.10. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 18.10. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 25.10. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 08.11. 14:00 - 15:30 Helene-Richter-Saal UniCampus Hof 8 3G-EG-21
- Thursday 15.11. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 22.11. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 29.11. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 06.12. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 13.12. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 10.01. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 17.01. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 24.01. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
- Thursday 31.01. 14:00 - 16:00 Raum 4 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-19
Information
Aims, contents and method of the course
In this course we will analyse a range of Virginia Woolf’s texts via a focus on authorship. Virginia Woolf was born into a prominent Victorian household that embodied and celebrated ‘authorship’ in various ways. Leslie Stephen (her father), who was first married to W. M. Thackeray’s daughter, famously edited the first Dictionary of National Biography. His rich collection of books and portraits of ‘eminent Victorians’ certainly inspired but also complicated Woolf’s imagination. In a way, from the very beginning, questions of ‘fatherhood’ and ‘nationalism’ were inseparable from questions of ‘authorship’. In some way or another, all of Virginia Woolf’s writings insistently reflect on the notion of authorship as well as on the practice of writing itself. By drawing on seminal theoretical texts such as Umberto Eco’s ‘Texts and Interpreters’, Michel Foucault’s ‘What is an Author?’ and Roland Barthes’ ‘The Death of the Author’, we will ask the following questions: What is an author for Virginia Woolf? What does it mean to fictionally ‘resurrect’ Judith Shakespeare in A Room of One’s Own? What are Woolf’s self-masking practices in her novels and how do these tie in with her avant-garde modernist poetics, with androgyny as well as with her feminist ideas of spatial autonomy and financial emancipation? How did her psychic illness affect her own authorship? Is it fair to talk about a ‘broken’, ‘disabled’ or ‘split’ form of authorship? We will read A Sketch of the Past, A Room of One’s Own, To the Lighthouse with additional readings from her short stories and essays. We will investigate these questions by taking into account Woolf’s cultural and historical context; more precisely, her involvement in the Bloomsbury group, her acquaintances and relationships with influential figures such as Lytton Strachey, Roger Fry, Clive Bell, her sister Vanessa and Duncan Grant.
Assessment and permitted materials
active participation in class, two short essays and weekly assignments, specialist tasks.
Minimum requirements and assessment criteria
pass rate: 60%
assessment criteria:
Essay with a focus on theory (approximately 1200 words) 30%
Essay which applies theory to a primary text (approximately 1200 words) 30%
Specialist tasks (20%)
Active participation and discussion 20%
No more than two lessons may be missed
assessment criteria:
Essay with a focus on theory (approximately 1200 words) 30%
Essay which applies theory to a primary text (approximately 1200 words) 30%
Specialist tasks (20%)
Active participation and discussion 20%
No more than two lessons may be missed
Examination topics
Contents covered throughout the semester. Participants are expected to read all set texts plus the additional secondary/theoretical material provided in the reader; they are also expected to engage in autonomous research, to offer a critical and reflective analysis of texts and concepts.
Reading list
Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse (available at Facultas on campus).Further primary and secondary literature will be made available in a Reader at CopyStudio Schwarzspanierstraße.
Association in the course directory
Studium: UF 344; MA 844; MA UF 046/507
Code/Modul: UF 4.2.4-323-325; MA4, MA6, MA7; M04A
Lehrinhalt: 12-3251
Code/Modul: UF 4.2.4-323-325; MA4, MA6, MA7; M04A
Lehrinhalt: 12-3251
Last modified: We 09.09.2020 00:22