Module Specifications.
Current Academic Year 2024 - 2025
All Module information is indicative, and this portal is an interim interface pending the full upgrade of Coursebuilder and subsequent integration to the new DCU Student Information System (DCU Key).
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Date posted: September 2024
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Description This module focuses on the period from the American and French revolutions of the eighteenth century up to the great European revolutions of 1848, a period generally referred to as the Romantic period, or the Age of Revolution. Students will be introduced to the concept of Romanticism, and study it in its political and artistic manifestations. When students have completed this module, they will understand the importance of the key ideas featured, how they are reflected in the chosen literary texts by key literary figures of the time, and how they influenced our modern conceptions of art and society. A central concern of the course will be to introduce students to Romantic constructions of childhood, and examine why both childhood and the power of the imagination are vitally important to writers and poets of this period. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Learning Outcomes 1. Discuss the characteristics, complexity and contradictions of the term ‘Romanticism’, and the context out of which it emerged. 2. Display knowledge of a range of writers from the period, and their specific contributions and/or reactions to the major themes and concerns of the period. 3. Identify the contribution that Romantic writers and writing of the period made to the development of art (with particular emphasis on literature, notions of childhood, morality, politics and society). 4. Appreciate and write about broader issues relating to issues of periodisation; the relationship between the artist and society; the role of the artist and the function of art; developments in the fields of education, individual rights and intellectual freedom; the transition of natural philosophy to science; and literature’s role in these issues. 5. Display a more nuanced understanding of the craft and creative process of art and/or the artist. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml |
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Indicative Content and Learning Activities
Introduction:What is Romanticism?The Revolutionary Debate:The Rights of Man: Edmund Burke and Thomas PaineThe Democratisation of Literature and the Romantic Aesthetic:William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Lyrical BalladsThe Rights of Women:Mary Wollstonecraft, Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Hannah MoreThe Gothic and its Critics (1):Matthew Lewis, The MonkThe Gothic and its Critics (2):Jane Austen, Northanger AbbeyThe Romantic Child:William Blake: Songs of Innocence and ExperiencePoesy:John KeatsAnarchy in the UK:Percy Bysshe ShelleyByron and Byronism:A selection of Byron’s poetryRomanticism and Science:Mary Shelley, Frankenstein | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Indicative Reading List
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Other Resources None | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||