World Literature II: Difference between revisions
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* [[Fyodor Dostoyevsky]]: <i>[[Notes from Underground]]</i> | * [[Fyodor Dostoyevsky]]: <i>[[Notes from Underground]]</i> | ||
* [[Stèphane Mallarmè]] | * [[Stèphane Mallarmè]] | ||
*[[Arthur Rimbaud]] | * [[Arthur Rimbaud]] | ||
* | * [[Charles Baudelaire]] | ||
==Historical Periods== | ==Historical Periods== |
Revision as of 17:24, 28 March 2006
ENGL 2112, World Literature II, examines national literatures other than those of Britain and America from the Renaissance to the present. Particular emphasis is placed on western literature, especially continental, Russian, and Latin American fiction of the 19th and 20th centuries. World Lit II will explore texts — poems, novels, novellas, plays, and short stories — in their historical and cultural contexts as well as consider how those texts still inform our views of ourselves today. Since we have only a limited time in this survey, we will concentrate on both diversity of texts explored and the detail of that exploration. Texts include those by Voltaire, Pushkin, Dostoyevsky, Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Ibsen, Mann, and Borges, among others.
Texts
Presented in chronological order. Please add most entries off of the World Literature page.
- Molière: Tartuffe
- Voltaire: Candide
- Alexander Pope: The Rape of the Lock
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Faust
- Alexander Pushkin: “The Queen of Spades”
- Nikolai Gogol: "The Overcoat"
- Robert Browning: “My Last Duchess”
- Fyodor Dostoyevsky: Notes from Underground
- Stèphane Mallarmè
- Arthur Rimbaud
- Charles Baudelaire
Historical Periods
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