230625 Island Stories: Utopia and Dystopia (S) (WiSe 2007/2008)

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Ever since Platon's Politeia, writers have been fascinated by the idea of re-thinking and re-inventing social and political life, and islands have particularly attracted authors as settings for new, unthought-of conditions of imaginary societies. Manifest in the narrative subgenres of utopia and dystopia, islands have been cast in the guise of paradise or hell, to be compared and contrasted with contemporary conditions: They have been used as mental spaces for the projection of hopes and wishes as well as all sorts of cultural anxieties concerning politics, religion, science, and psychology. In this course, we will discuss five island narratives from the literary history of Britain from the Renaissance (Thomas More's short Utopia) to today (a recent novel by a British writer of Sri Lankan descent), and analyse their very different utopian or dystopian views and narrative techniques.

Texts: Please buy your own copies of

Thomas More, Utopia (1516) - preferred edition: Penguin Classics
Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe (1719) - preferred edition: Penguin Classics
H.G. Wells, The Island of Doctor Moreau (1896) - any edition
Aldous Huxley, Island (1962) - any edition
Romesh Gunesekera, Heaven's Edge (2002) - any edition

Teaching staff

Dates ( Calendar view )

Frequency Weekday Time Format / Place Period  
weekly Mo 16-18 C01-246 15.10.2007-08.02.2008

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Subject assignments

Degree programme/academic programme Validity Variant Subdivision Status Semester LP  
British and American Studies / Master (Enrollment until SoSe 2012) MaAngGM2   3  
Anglistik/Englisch MA/SI/SII; LIT; B.3   HS

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WS2007_230625@ekvv.uni-bielefeld.de
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Last update basic details/teaching staff:
Friday, December 11, 2015 
Last update times:
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 
Last update rooms:
Wednesday, October 10, 2007 
Type(s) / SWS (hours per week per semester)
seminar (S) / 2
Department
Faculty of Linguistics and Literary Studies
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4876705