The Chief British Romantic
Writers Joseph
Viscomi (jsviscom@email.unc.edu)
English 437.1, Fall, 2008 office GL 504, hrs: T-Th 2-3:15
3:30-4:45 Tues & Thurs GL 305 &
appt. 962-8764
http://english.unc.edu/faculty/viscomij.html
TEXTS:
The Norton Anthology of
English Literature: The Romantic Period. Volume
D. Eighth Edition. Edited by M. H. Abrams. New York: W. W.
Norton and Company, Inc. 2006.
Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein,
or The Modern Prometheus. Edited with an introduction by Maurice Hindle.
New York: Viking Penguin Inc., 1992.
Trimmer, Joseph. A Guide to
MLA Documentation, sixth edition. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2004
RESOURCES:
The English Romantic Poets; A
Review of Research and Criticism, ed. Frank Jordan, 4th edition. MLA,
l985. [Davis Reference Shelf, PR590.E5.1985, ROW 29]. This is an annotated
bibliography of books and important articles on the Romantic poets and their
works. Critical works on the Romantics from before and after1985 to the present
can be found in the Norton Antho. (pgs. A23-33), through the index of
periodical literature, the annual bibliography published by Garland Press (from
1979) and journals in the field, e.g., Blake/An
Illustrated Quarterly, The Wordsworth Circle, and Keats-Shelley Journal, which is now online for the years 1994-2004
at: http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/ksjbib/.
See also http://www.lib.unc.edu/
for UNCÕs Article Databases (e.g., MLA
International Bibliography [1963-2004]), Eighteenth-Century Collections Online,
and Literature Online), E-Journal Finder, and Print
Journals (Catalog Search); the Romantic Circles at http://www.rc.umd.edu., the Norton Anthology web site at www.wwnorton.com/nael, Voice of the Shuttle, http://www.english.upenn.edu/~mgamer/Romantic/,
and Romantic Literary Resources, http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/romantic.html,
and Google Scholar at http://www.scholar.google.com/. For articles online, see the Scholarly Journal Archive at http://www.jstor.org/. Also helpful is the Introduction to Library Research, http://www.lib.unc.edu/instruct/tutorial/.
Blake's The Book of Thel,
The Songs of Innocence and of Experience, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell,
America, a Prophecy, Europe, a Prophecy, The Book of Urizen are illuminated
books that are reproduced in excellent facsimiles, copies of which are in the
Department of Rare Books, Wilson Library; for excellent digital reproductions
of various exemplary copies of these and other of BlakeÕs illuminated books, as
well as engravings, paintings, and helpful bibliographies, go to The Blake Archive at http://blakearchive.org [WBA]
8/19 Introduction
to course: The Romantic Movement
Contents pages, General Introduction (Norton 1-23, A50). Poetic
Forms and Literary Terminology (A61-77)
8/21 WILLIAM BLAKE (1757-1827)
Introduction
to Blake (N 35-39; Religions in England, A59-60),
poems from Poetical Sketches
(+handout)
for
Blake biography, go to: blakearchive.org/
About Blake/ Biography
All Religions Are One, There is No Natural
Religion, series a & b (N 41-42)
For images go to blakearchive.org/
Works in the Archive/ Illuminated Books/ARO; NNR;
8/26-28 Illuminated
Printing and Illuminated Books: blakearchive.org/About
Blake/ Illuminated Printing
Songs of Innocence, Songs of Experience, Songs
of Innocence and of Experience
(go
to: blakearchive.org/ Works in the
Archive/ Illuminated Books/ Songs of I and of E)
(optional:
http://www.ibiblio.org/jsviscom/island/)
9/2-4, 9 The Book of Thel; The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
Prose and letters (N 86-91), French Revolution (N 117-39)
F. Revolution, http://wwnorton.com/nael/romantic/topic_3/welcome.htm,
Overview, Contexts, Illustrations
9/11 Blake
quiz
WILLIAM WORDSWORTH
(1770-1850)
9/11, 16, 18 Introduction
to WW and Introduction to Dorothy Wordsworth (1771-1855) and selections from
her Alfoxden and Grasmere Journals (N 383-96);
http://wwnorton.com/nael/romantic/topic_1/welcome.htm,
Overview, Contexts, Illustrations.
from Lyrical Ballads
(1798), and handouts: Advertisement
to Lyrical Ballads and ÒYew TreeÓ
Preface to the Lyrical
Ballads (238)
9/23, 25 Coleridge's
Biographia Literaria, ch. 4, 14, 17
(on Wordsworth and origin of Lyrical
Ballads) (N 474-86)
Poems (N 251-292; these are mostly from Lyrical Ballads 2nd ed. (2 vols., 1800) and Poems
in Two Volumes (1807); Sonnets (N 296-299); Prospectus to The Recluse (N 301)
Prelude,
Introduction and excerpts from Books 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14
SAMUEL COLERIDGE (1772-1834)
9/30, 10/2, 7, 9 Introduction, Poems (N 419-467), focusing on conversation poems and poems of mysticism and demonism; William Hazlitt, intro and My First Acquaintance with Poets (N 513-26)
Biographia Literaria, ch. 1, 13;
selections from Lectures on
Shakespeare and The StatesmanÕs
Manual
10/14 Midterm
Exam FALL
BREAK 10/16
GEORGE GORDON, LORD BYRON
(1788-1824)
10/21, 23, 28 Introduction
and letters; Poems (N 555-62), ÒPrometheusÓ
(handout)
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, canto III; Manfred: A Dramatic Poem;
Don Juan, Cantos
1, 2, 3, 4;
Romantic Orientalism, http://wwnorton.com/nael/romantic/topic_4/welcome.htm,
Overview, Context, Ill.
PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY
(1792-1822)
10/30, 11/4, 6, Introduction, Poems (N 701-32,
763-71); including ÒAlastorÓ and Preface, Preface to Prometheus Unbound;
Adonais; A Defence of Poetry
Literary Gothicism, http://wwnorton.com/nael/romantic/topic_2/welcome.htm,
Overview, Context, Illus.
MARY SHELLEY (1797-1851)
11/11-13 Frankenstein
(1831 text and Preface; HindleÕs introduction in the Penguin edition).
11/18 Byron,
Shelley, M. Shelley quiz
JOHN KEATS (1795-1821)
11/18, 20, 25 Introduction,
letters, poems (N 82-834; 886-902)
11/27 Thanksgiving
12/2, Keats
continued:
Eve of St. Agnes; Lamia; The Fall of
Hyperion: A Dream; the Odes, ÒLa Belle Dame Sans MerciÓ
FINAL EXAM: Thursday, December 11, 4pm
ASSIGNMENTS: two quizzes, midterm, and a
final exam. You will be asked to contribute identification questions for exams
and to supply detailed answers. Questions and answers are to be typed.
Two papers
are required: the first will deal with one or more works from the first
generation of writers (Blake, Wordsworth, or Coleridge); the second will deal
with works from the second generation (Byron, P. Shelley, M. Shelley, or
Keats). The topics are open and can be taken from anything we read or discuss
in class, or from ÒExplorationsÓ in Norton online. The topic must be cleared with me at least one week in advanced of the
due date; length of the papers should be appropriate to the topic and
argument, though four pages are usually too few and ten too many. N.B. All papers should include a works cited page
and at least two secondary sources; all
web sources must be from vetted sites or refereed electronic journals.
GRADES: You are responsible for the works
assigned on the syllabus, and not only those works discussed in class. The
papers are worth 25 points each; the final exam is worth 25 points; the midterm
exam is worth 15 points. The quizzes are worth 3 and 7 points respectively.
Due dates for papers on the following
authors:
Paper 1.
Blake 9/27 (topic due
20) Wordsworth
10/13 (6) Coleridge
10/25 (13)
Paper 2.
Byron 11/3 (10) P.
Shelley 11/22 (15) M. Shelley 11/29
(22) Keats 12/8 (14)