Seminar: Dante’s Afterlives in Modern English Literature

  • Teaching

    Details

    Faculty Faculty of Humanities
    Domain English
    Code UE-L06.01115
    Languages English
    Type of lesson Seminar
    Level Master
    Semester SP-2021

    Schedules and rooms

    Summary schedule Monday 17:15 - 19:00, Hebdomadaire (Spring semester)

    Teaching

    Responsibles
    • Straub Julia
    Teachers
    • Straub Julia
    Description

    In this seminar, we will trace the afterlives of Dante Alighieri in English literature from the Romantic to the modernist period. Dante’s Vita Nuova and Divine Comedy had a tremendous impact on writers as diverse as Mary Shelley, John Keats, Matthew Arnold, John Ruskin, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Christina Rossetti, or T. S. Eliot. By exploring their productive engagement with Dante, we will be able to study important socio-cultural contexts such as medievalism, the fascination with Italy that pervaded the 19th century and gender politics, but also various genres, i.e., the novel, poetry and cultural criticism. We will, in addition, investigate aesthetic features such intertextuality, intermediality or processes of linguistic and intercultural translation. All the writers included in this seminar read Dante differently, and by following a trajectory from the early 19th to the early 20th century we will be able to detect different “Dantes” reflecting changing socio-political attitudes and cultural inclinations.

    Knowledge of Italian is not necessary for this class since we will read Dante in English translation. However, familiarity with Dante’s Divine Comedy and Vita Nuova is a requirement for this class. The reading of these works will not be part of the seminar schedule. If students are not at all familiar with these two works by Dante, they are strongly advised to read them before the start of the semester.

    Training objectives

    At the end of this semester students will

    • Be able to identify and interpret salient episodes from Dante’s works as represented in modern English literature.
    • Give persuasive accounts of the theoretical terms available to frame such analyses.
    • Express themselves both orally and in writing on literary texts dating from different periods and belonging to different literary genres.
    • Comment on the contextual aspects that affected the reception of Dante’s works in specific periods.
    Softskills No
    Off field No
    BeNeFri No
    Mobility No
    UniPop No

    Documents

    Bibliography

    Texts:

    Shorter texts will be made available on Moodle.

    The one long text that we will read is a beautiful, but little-known novel by Mary Shelley called Valperga. Unfortunately, there is no recent paperback edition available by any of the major publishing houses. Students can read the novel on Project Gutenberg or check the internet for print on demand books (and of course check out library holdings).

    Other works that students can get started on during the semester break are T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land and The Four Quartets, Christina Rossetti’s “Monna Innominata” sonnet sequence and Seamus Heaney’s Field Work (which, dating from 1979, we will treat as a late modernist piece of writing).

    Recommended translations of Dante’s works are:

    Dante Alighieri. The Divine Comedy. Transl. Allan Mandelbaum. Everyman’s Library 1995. ISBN-13 : 978-0679433132

    Dante Alighieri. La Vita Nuova. Transl. Barbara Reynolds. London: Penguin, 2004. ISBN-13 : 978-0140449471

  • Dates and rooms
    Date Hour Type of lesson Place
    22.02.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    01.03.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    08.03.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    15.03.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    22.03.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    29.03.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    12.04.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    19.04.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    26.04.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    03.05.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    10.05.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    17.05.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
    31.05.2021 17:15 - 19:00 Cours MIS 04, Room 4128
  • Assessments methods

    Séminaire - Outside session

    Assessments methods By rating, By success/failure
  • Assignment
    Valid for the following curricula:
    Comparative Literature 30 [MA]
    Version: SA10_MA_P2_fr_de_V01
    Module E - Introduction à la Littérature générale et comparée
    Module optionnel > Module F - Elargissement historique

    Comparative Literature 90 [MA]
    Version: SA10_MA_PA_fr_de_bil_V02
    Module C - Littératures en contact
    Module A - Littératures européennes
    Module D - Interculturalité

    English Language and Literature 30 [MA]
    Version: SA15_MA_P2_ang_V01
    Module 3minor: English Literature I (1500-1780)
    Module 4minor: English Literature II (1780-present)

    English Language and Literature 90 [MA]
    Version: SA17_MA_PA_ang_V01
    Modules 5 branches > Module 3: English Literature I (1500-1780)
    Modules 5 branches > Module 4: English Literature II (1780-present)

    European Studies 30 [MA]
    Version: SA14_MA_PS_bil_v01
    Espace culturel européen > Module "Langues et littératures" (Option B)