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Reason, Imagination, Revolution: Literature and Culture from Pope to Austen - ENGL370

This unit introduces students to writings that track the trajectories of formal, philosophical and culture change in British literary culture between 1710 and 1825. It examines how Reason is idealised and critiqued by writers associated with the Enlightenment, such as Pope, Swift, Haywood and Johnson, and how it is situated in relation to Imagination and developed into the Romanticism of Blake, Wordsworth and Coleridge. The unit also explores how those conceptual exchanges feed into the revolutionary fervour of the 1790s and provokes the responses of Austen, Shelley, Byron and Keats, who along with their Romantic forebears, set the cultural bases for British literature into the nineteenth century.

Credit Points: 3
When Offered:

2019 - Next offered in 2019

Staff Contact(s): Dr Geoffrey Payne
Prerequisites:

6cp in ENGL units at 200 level Prerequisite Information

Corequisites:

NCCW(s): ENGL261, ENGL394, ENGX370
Unit Designation(s):
Unit Type:
Assessed As: Graded
Offered By:

Department of English

Faculty of Arts

Course structures, including unit offerings, are subject to change.
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