Courses in registration (in Polish) WA-rejestracja na przedmioty do wyboru 1BA/FACH 15-472
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2022/SL - Academic year 2021/2022, summer semester (there could be semester, trimester or one-year classes) |
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15-HLA-CH-11 |
Classes
Academic year 2021/2022, summer semester
Groups
Brief description
History of American Literature is a historically-grounde one-semester course designed to survey the main trends and ideas in American literature from the Colonial Period to the beginning of our century. The syllabus is structured chronologically to facilitate a better understanding of both the inner tensions and the continuity of American literary tradition. The reading list covers the most representative literary figures of a given period or movement and is meant to introduce students to the variety of aesthetic practices, genres, themes and works which make up for the formal, thematic and ethnic richness of American literature and culture. The course is also meant to prepare students for further professional and interpersonal development by encouraging their own literary pursuits and interests and making them sensitive to other cultures and traditions. Students will also learn reading, interpretive and critical strategies useful in further research and in teaching. |
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15-HLB-CH-11 |
Classes
Academic year 2021/2022, summer semester
Groups
Brief description
This course is devoted to studying the most canonical texts of British literature. Students are encouraged to go through all literary periods, ranging from the Old-English era through the Middle-Ages, the English Renaissance and Restoration, the Age of Enlightenment, Romanticism, Victorianism, English and Irish modernism, up to late twentieth-century postmodern drama and fiction. Among the main objectives are: 1) to make everyone participating in this course approach literary works in an analytical way; 2) to accustom students to reading secondary literature in order to use it for further critical analysis; 3) to enable students to acquire and use skills necessary for writing short academic essays on topics related to British literary tradition; 4) to improve students’ abilities to work and communicate in groups. |
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