128222 SE Literary Seminar (MA) (2025W)
The Lockdown Novel in English
Labels
Registration/Deregistration
- Registration is open from Mo 08.09.2025 00:00 to Mo 22.09.2025 12:00
- Deregistration possible until Fr 31.10.2025 23:59
Details
Lecturers
Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N
This is an interactive course. It relies in large parts on flipped-classroom methodologies and therefore requires students' regular attendance.
The seminar will take place as a blocked course, with two sessions of 90 minutes at the beginning of term (mid-October 2025), and four Saturdays with 6 hours of class each (with breaks): one at the beginning of November, the end of November, the end of December and the end of January 2026.
All teaching units will be onsite.
You may miss 2 sessions overall (i.e. 2x90 minutes of class). Therefore, please make sure that you can attend all four Saturday sessions, because they are counted as three full sessions of 90 minutes!
If a viable doctor's note is produced, you may miss a third session of 90 minutes but then need to compensate it at the teacher's discretion. If you miss more than three lessons, this will result in your failing the course, due to excessive absence.
- Friday 17.10. 08:15 - 09:45 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
- Friday 24.10. 08:15 - 09:45 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
- Saturday 08.11. 10:00 - 16:00 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
- N Saturday 29.11. 10:00 - 16:00 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
- Saturday 20.12. 10:00 - 16:00 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
- Saturday 24.01. 10:00 - 16:00 Raum 1 Anglistik UniCampus Hof 8 3E-EG-05
Information
Aims, contents and method of the course
Assessment and permitted materials
- Regular attendance and preparation of session material (students may miss two sessions, i.e. 2x90 min)
- General participation in class, including individual contributions, work with a partner as well as work in groups
- Expert work on assigned readings: each student will be assigned to one source material of the syllabus and provide expert input in the respective session
- A portfolio of three short tasks (written, oral, and creative) that prepare you for your term paper
- A 10-minute paper presented at the student conference in January
- A formal written MA paper of 6.500-8.000 words
Plagiarized and fraudulent performances (also in single tasks or parts of an exam) lead to non-grading of the course (entry of an 'X' in the transcript).
In case of doubt, the course instructor may invite students to a grade-related conversation (plausibility check) about submitted partial performances.The use of AI is only permitted for specific tasks as outlined by the lecturer. Concrete instructions on Moodle as well as in class.
Minimum requirements and assessment criteria
- Active participation and contributions in class (including your expert input in your respective session and your paper at the student conference): 25%
- Portfolio Tasks: 25%
- Term paper: 50%
Examination topics
- Input phases combined with group work and classroom discussion
- Student input from your expert session and your paper at the student conference
- Students' written research projects (term paper and portfolio tasks)
Reading list
- Howard, Catherine Ryan. 56 Days. London: Corvus, [2021] 2022. [paperback ed.]
- Moss, Sarah. The Fell. London: Picador, 2021.
- Nagamatsu, Sequoia. how high we go in the dark. London: Bloomsbury, 2022.
Please buy the novels in these editions.Theory and Secondary Literature:
Latour, Bruno. After Lockdown: A Metamorphosis. Cambridge: Polity, 2021.
Additional texts will be published and available on Moodle at the beginning of term.
Association in the course directory
Code/Modul: M 4.1, M 4.2
Lehrinhalt: 12-0631
- changing socal relations within the locked-down home, e.g. between parents and children or romantic partners;
- changing attitudes towards home spaces and home-making practices;
- the politics of lockdown, e.g. who had how much space, domestic violence, citizenship or unemployment.
The course will be project-based: after an input phase, students will be expected to develop their own research questions and, with guidance, develop, present and discuss their projects in the course of the semester, including a student conference in the final block of meetings towards the end of January.At the end of the class, students will have gained an awareness of the critical debate surrounding lockdown measures and its literary representation (including the variety and use of genres and narrative features), will be able to define and use relevant theoretical positions reflecting the debate in the field and will be able to formulate a research question and make a clear point for their MA paper. MA students are expected to rely on their more advanced knowledge of texts, theories and methodologies to develop a more independent and more critical research project, also as a way of further developing skills and competences for their MA thesis projects.