English 220: British Romantic Literature
Spring, 2003
______________________________________________________
Professor Olmsted
Rice 108
Phone: 775-8582
e-mail: John.Olmsted@oberlin.edu
Office hours: TuTh 4:30 to 5:30 p.m.
Text
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, The Romantic Period, Vol. 2A. Seventh Edition.
The course has two aims:
-to provide an introduction to the poetry, prose, painting and architecture created in Great Britain between 1789 and 1832 and
-to introduce class participants to research skills and to library and online sources which you may use to find out more about British Romantic Literature
Class Schedule:
Week of
"One impulse from a vernal wood:" The Romantics and 'Nature'
February 3 Norton, 1-23
February 10 Wordsworth, 219-228, 251-270
Dorothy Wordsworth, 383-397
Blake, 35-39, 43-59
"The Bones of the Dead:" Politics and Imagination
February 17 Norton, 117-137
Blake, 72-91
Wordsworth, 238-251, 303-383
PAPER DUE February 20
February 24 Coleridge, 439-441, 467-483, 488-492
Keats, 823-826, 834-844, 849-854, 886-903
March 3 Shelley, 727-729, 789-802
DeQuincey, 547-551
PAPER DUE March 6
"A bright deformity on high:" Romantic Transgression
March 10 Coleridge, 422-438
Byron, 551-621
March 17 Research Skills Project
Meeting March
20 in Mudd 443 with
Jessica
Grim, Reference Librarian
March 24 SPRING BREAK
March 31 DeQuincey, 529-543
Shelley, 769-786
"Alas, the love of women:" Women and the Romantics
April 7 Barbauld, 27-29
Wollstonecraft, 163-192
Coleridge, 441-456
PAPER AND RESEARCH PROJECT DUE April 10
April 14 Keats, 845-847, 856-872
Byron, 621-689, 695-696
Mary Shelley, 903-1034 (Frankenstein)
April 21 Shelley, Frankenstein
April 28 Romantic Painting
May 5 Romantic Architecture
FINAL PAPER DUE MAY 8
Participants in this class are required to attend all
classes, come to class on time, take an active part in discussion, and hand in
assigned work when it is due. Late
papers will be penalized.
Three papers, each 5 to 6 pages in length,
a research skills project and a 10 to 12 page final paper will be
required.
The papers will respond to and assess the readings in
that unit; the research skills project and the final paper will require that
you seek out primary and secondary materials from college libraries, the
college art museum, and from the World Wide Web. All papers should be delivered in printed form only.
The best place to start any search is the Oberlin College Library Web Site http://www.oberlin.edu/library/ where you can find out more about general internet research tools.
The “Selected Bibliographies” in The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume 2A, The Romantic Period, pages A23 to A33, provide accurate and up-to-date citations of books and journal articles which treat British Romanticism. The bibliography begins with suggested general readings on English history and literature, then provides an introduction to the most important printed reference works for the study of English literature. Next, general introductions to literary criticism and theory are cited, followed by specific bibliographies of the Romantic period and studies which trace the political, social and intellectual background. Following this you will find entries on each of the major figures we will study together listing the best scholarly editions and a selection of the most important books and articles on each writer’s work.
Also included in appendices to The Romantic Period (pages A51 to A77) are articles on British money, a time line, and a useful introduction to poetic forms and literary terminology.
Here are some of the best online sites treating the Romantic Period:
Voice of the Shuttle: Romantics – the best general source on the period
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=2750
Literary Resource: Romantic – a fine overview of the period with many sites evaluated and described
http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~jlynch/Lit/romantic.html
Romantic Circles – new editions of Romantic works and a wealth of scholarly resources
http://www.rc.umd.edu/hpfiles/index1.html
http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/patten/romanpage.html
The Romantic Chronology- a useful timeline
http://english.ucsb.edu:591/rchrono/
Individual Author sites:
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=808
Byron Chronology
http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/byronchronology/
S. T. Coleridge Archive
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/stc/Coleridge/stc.html
The Keats-Shelley Journal
http://www.luc.edu/publications/keats-shelley/ksjweb.htm
Mary Shelley Resources
http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/mschronology/mws.html
Mary Wollstonecraft
http://www.edgehill.ac.uk/acadepts/humarts/english/subject/mw.htm
William Wordsworth
http://www.usd.edu/~tgannon/words.html
Topic sites:
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=2520
Gothic Literature: What the Romantic Writers Read
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=1244
“The Canon and the Web: Reconfiguring Romanticism
in the Information Age
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=18
Romanticism on the Net
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=72
The Sublime
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=2563
Women and Romanticism
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=2827
http://www.cwrl.utexas.edu/~worp/
The French Revolution
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse-netscape.asp?id=964