Course level

Undergraduate

Faculty

Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences

School

Humanities and Social Sciences

Units

2

Duration

One Semester

Attendance mode

In Person

Class hours

1 Lecture hour
2 Seminar hours

Restricted

BAdvHum(Hons) and BHum/LLB(Hons) students only

Assessment methods

Participation, Essay, Presentation, Take-home examination

Course enquiries

Doctor Jennifer Clement (Semester 2, St Lucia, In person)

Course description

Shakespeare is now seen as a classic of world literature, but how and why did his imaginative achievement escape its national confines? How did it become a privileged place for a variety of writers, artists, and composers (many of them non-anglophone) for thinking through what constitutes a classic, a tradition, and the role of literature in exploring the human condition? This story is part of a much larger story in which we see European Romanticism reshaping these issues and wrestling with the concept of the 'modern' and its relationship with the past. This course begins with Shakespeare in his period, but moves outward to examine key texts and productions from the humanist, neo-classical and romantic periods in thought in which the problem of traditions is thematised.

Archived offerings

Course offerings Location Mode Course Profile
Semester 2, 2024 (22/07/2024 - 18/11/2024) St Lucia In Person Course Profile
Semester 2, 2023 (24/07/2023 - 18/11/2023) St Lucia In Person Course Profile
Semester 2, 2022 (25/07/2022 - 19/11/2022) St Lucia Internal Course Profile
Semester 2, 2021 (26/07/2021 - 20/11/2021) St Lucia Internal Course Profile