The Course will enable the students to appraise Pre-Romantic and Romantic writers and the salient features of their writings, interpret the various forms of literature in the respective ages and develop skills of critical analysis and interpretation of selected works in order to understand the theme, language, style, and the like.
Thomas Gray
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard
The Progress of Poesy
William Collins
Ode to Simplicity
Ode to Evening
Charles Lamb
Oxford in the Vacation
Imperfect Sympathies
Dream Children
Mackery End, in Hertfordshire
William Hazlitt
On Familiar Style
On Going a Journey
Common Sense
Why Distant Objects Please
Mary Shelley
Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus
Jane Austen
Emma
Bowra, C.M. The Romantic Imagination. Oxford Paperbacks, 1961.
Ford, Boris, ed. The New Pelican Guide to English Literature: From Blake to Byron. Vols. 1-3. Penguin Books, 1999.
Hough, Graham. The Romantic Poets. Hutchinson, 1967.
Morton, Timothy, ed. Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Routledge, 2002.
Pinion,F.B. Jane Austen Companion: A Critical Survey and Reference Book. Macmillan. 1973.
e-resources:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KoTjbhhXNUE (Gray)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Erory940xUg (Shelley)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONZGwAv8r10 (Austen)
Journals:
English Literary History
Rupkatha Journal
The students will: CO19. Develop an understanding of Romanticism as a concept, in relation to ancillary concepts like Classicism CO20. Examine the main characteristics of the pre-Romantic and the Romantic period CO21. Critique the social, philosophical, intellectual and literary backgrounds, including the German and the French influence CO22. Evaluate various texts against their historical background for a better, critical understanding CO23. Investigate and examine texts on the basis of key themes, issues, and debates emerging in Romantic poetry, informed by philosophical and theoretical concepts constructing the literature of this age |