Literary value and 100 years of American literature
7.5 ECTS creditsIn this course, students read 20th-century American literature and discuss it in relation to various aspects of literary value. These aspects include, on the one hand, key issues in literary studies such as high/low culture, highbrow/middlebrow/lowbrow literature, the canon and the bestseller, tradition and experiment, convention and innovation, compliance and controversy, genius and celebrity, and, on the other, the literary properties and affordances of particular texts that can be seen as valuable in relation to historical and cultural contexts. What types of value does a literary text offer? Aesthetic value? Knowledge value? Emotional value? Social value? Economic value? Throughout the course, there is movement and interplay between theories of literary value, twentieth-century literary history, and specific literary texts.
Instruction is in the form of seminars, for which students complete reading and writing assignments. Some texts are read by all students in preparation for seminars, and other relevant texts are selected by the students for their written and oral assignments. The course requires students to participate actively in seminars, which sometimes means mandatory oral presentations.
Instruction is in the form of seminars, for which students complete reading and writing assignments. Some texts are read by all students in preparation for seminars, and other relevant texts are selected by the students for their written and oral assignments. The course requires students to participate actively in seminars, which sometimes means mandatory oral presentations.
Progressive specialisation:
A1N (has only first‐cycle course/s as entry requirements)
Education level:
Master's level
Admission requirements:
90 ECTS credits including at least 30 ECTS credits at the G2F level in one of the main fields of study English, Comparative Literature, or Film Studies, and upper secondary level English 6 or English level 2, or equivalent
Selection:
Selection is usually based on your grade point average from upper secondary school or the number of credit points from previous university studies, or both.
Course code:
ENAL11
The course is not included in the course offerings for the next period.