- UCAS course code
- QQ36
- UCAS institution code
- M20
Bachelor of Arts (BA)
BA Latin and English Literature
- Typical A-level offer: ABB including specific subjects
- Typical contextual A-level offer: ACC including specific subjects
- Refugee/care-experienced offer: ACC including specific subjects
- Typical International Baccalaureate offer: 34 points overall with 6,5,5 at HL including specific subjects
Course unit details:
Queer Forms: Objects and Animals in Eighteenth-Century Poetry
Unit code | ENGL31282 |
---|---|
Credit rating | 20 |
Unit level | Level 3 |
Teaching period(s) | Semester 2 |
Available as a free choice unit? | No |
Aims
- explore a range of canonical and noncanonical poems written by women in Britain and America across the long eighteenth century;
- use these texts to introduce students to eighteenth-century poetry – its history and development, its critical reception today (including legacies of feminist recovery), and some of its principal preoccupations across forms and genres;
- examine this poetry’s renewed importance for the intersecting research fields of gender and sexuality studies, environmental humanities, and poetic form / formalism
- build on critical skills and vocabularies developed in such courses as Theory and Text; Literature and History; Gender, Sexuality and the Body: Theories and Histories; Romanticism (1776-1832); and Satire and the Novel: English Literature of the Long Eighteenth Century.
Teaching and learning methods
One hour lecture, two hour seminar
The course will meet and exceed Blackboard minimum requirements
Knowledge and understanding
· Confidently engage with work in eighteenth-century poetry, from feminist recoveries of poems by women to the enduring significance of these texts for research in gender and sexuality studies, environmental humanities, and poetic form / formalism
· Demonstrate understanding of cultural contexts for eighteenth-century poetry, including debates about gender and sexuality, the body and its aesthetic representation, class and race, objects and animals, and the construction of the canon
· Display aptitude for writing critically about poems from a range of theoretically informed perspectives
Intellectual skills
· Analyse how encounters with the nonhuman in eighteenth-century women’s poetry generate opportunities to think beyond the limits of the human and its normative categories
· Discuss how this project of revising existing orders of knowledge and representation can be read in new ways through queer, gender, and critical race, and environmental studies
· Demonstrate proficiency with critical and theoretical vocabularies from studies in poetics, gender and sexuality, race, and environmental humanities
Practical skills
· Sustain a sophisticated scholarly argument focusing on how and why poetry is especially adept at facilitating these explorations, engaging with current ideas about form / formalism
· Sharpen skills in close reading
· Independently develop concepts and critical practices in an assessed portfolio of close readings of poems and an essay, informed by critical theory from the course
Transferable skills and personal qualities
· Close reading and textual analysis
· Argumentation and criticality: the construction of clear, rigorous, and detailed critical writing
Employability skills
- Analytical skills
- Group/team working
- Oral communication
- Written communication
Assessment methods
Method | Weight |
---|---|
Written assignment (inc essay) | 60% |
Portfolio | 40% |
Feedback methods
Feedback method | Formative or Summative |
Written Feedback | Summative |
Recommended reading
- Paula R. Backscheider and Catherine E. Ingrassia (eds), British Women Poets of the Long Eighteenth Century: An Anthology (Johns Hopkins, 2009)*
- Paula R. Feldman (ed.), British Women Poets of the Romantic Era: An Anthology (Johns Hopkins, 1997)
- Roger Lonsdale (ed.), Eighteenth-Century Women Poets (Oxford, 1989)
- Kadji Amin, Amber Jamilla Musser, and Roy Pérez (eds), ‘Queer Form: Aesthetics, Race, and the Violences of the Social’, ASAP/Journal 2, no. 2 (2017)
- Paula R. Backscheider, Eighteenth-Century Women Poets and Their Poetry: Inventing Agency, Inventing GenreTeaching staff
Staff member Role James Metcalf Unit coordinator