239814 The Cultures of Production: Industry and Work in British Literature (S) (SoSe 2013)

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Work has always played a major role in shaping individual lives and social conditions. It is particularly with the onset of the Industrial Revolution that British culture came to be dominated by notions of productivity and progress. While politicians and representatives of the economy have mostly looked at work and industry, and their effects on people's lives, as a boon, literary authors more often than not have seen the same processes as a bane. In this seminar, we will read a number of texts (poems, novels and theatre plays) which engage with various aspects of work and such aspects of culture as individual or group identity, class, family life, and gender. Since we will also explore the social, economic and idelogical backgrounds of the literary representations of industry and work, it makes sense to register for J. Schwarzkopf's course (239930 Industrialization as a Revolutionary Process), too; parallel registration is not obligatory, however.

Bibliography

Some materials (poems and Caryl Churchill's play Serious Money) will be provided in a reader. However, you are required to buy your own copies of the following novels:
Charles Dickens, Hard Times (Penguin Classics edition)
Elizabeth Gaskell, North and South (Penguin Classics edition)
David Lodge, Nice Work (any edition)

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Module Course Requirements  
23-ANG-AngVM1 Vertiefungsmodul 1: Britain 1.2 British Literature: Genre, Periods, Authors Study requirement
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1.3 British Cultural Studies: Theories, Periods, Media Study requirement
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Degree programme/academic programme Validity Variant Subdivision Status Semester LP  
Anglistik: British and American Studies / Bachelor (Enrollment until SoSe 2011) Kern- und Nebenfach BaAngPM4 Wahlpflicht 3. 4. 2/3 benotet  
Anglistik: British and American Studies (GHR) / Master of Education (Enrollment until SoSe 2014) BaAngPM4 Wahl 2/3  

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Limited number of participants: 40
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Last update basic details/teaching staff:
Friday, December 11, 2015 
Last update times:
Thursday, February 21, 2013 
Last update rooms:
Thursday, February 21, 2013 
Type(s) / SWS (hours per week per semester)
seminar (S) /
Department
Faculty of Linguistics and Literary Studies
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36897890