*All texts in Norton Anthology, 2 vols, 8th edn, except where otherwise indicated. LION is the Literature Online Database (Chadwyck-Healey), to which all students have access through the University subscription.*
Secondary/textbook material, obligatory reading:
- Stephen Greenblatt et al., eds., Norton Anthology of English Literature, 2 vols, 8th edn (NY: Norton, 2006). Editorial Introductions to the six post-medieval periods. [Ca. 130 pp.]
- Vol. I: ‘The Sixteenth Century (1485—1603)’ (pp. 485—511); ‘The Early Seventeenth Century (1603—1660)’ (pp. 1235—57); ‘The Restoration and the Eighteenth Century (1600—1785)’ (pp. 2057—80)
- Vol. II: ‘The Romantic Period’ (pp. 1—22); ‘The Victorian Age’ (pp. 979—99); ‘The Twentieth Century and After’ (pp. 1827—47)
Novels:
- Jane Austen (1775—1817), Emma (ed.Stephen Parrish and George Justice, 4th edn, Norton Critical Edition, 2011)
- Charles Dickens (1812—70), Great Expectations (ed. Edgar Rosenberg, Norton Critical Edition, 1999)
- Virginia Woolf (1882—1941), Mrs Dalloway (1925), ed. David Bradshaw (Oxford World’s Classics, 2000)
Short fiction:
- James Joyce (1882—1941), ‘The Dead’ Katherine Mansfield (1888—1923), ‘The Garden Party’
- Katherine Mansfield (1888-1923),`The Garden Party?
Plays:
- William Shakespeare (1564—1616), Julius Caesar (ed. David Daniell, Arden 3, 1998, or ed. Marvin Spevack, Cambridge Shakespeare, updated edn 2004) (NB! Shakespeare must be read in a scholarly single-play edition- not in the many Collected Works available- preferably in Daniell`s fine Arden edition)
- Tom Stoppard (1937—), Arcadia (1993)
Poems:
- William Shakespeare (1564—1616), sonnet 130 ‘(My mistress’eyes are nothing like the sun’)
- John Donne (1572—1631), ‘The Sun Rising’; ‘Death be not proud’
- John Milton (1608—74), ‘When I consider how my light is spent’ (?On His Blindness?)
- William Wordsworth (1770—1850), ‘The world is too much with us’; ‘I wandered lonely as a cloud’
- John Clare (1793—1864), ‘Decay’ (‘Amidst the happiest joy a shade of grief’) (LION) http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctxver=Z39.88-2003&xri:pqil:resver=0.2&resid=xri:lion&rftid=xri:lion:ft:po:Z300313795:3
- John Keats (1795—1821), ‘When I have fears that I may cease to be’; ‘Ode on Melancholy’
- Robert Browning (1812—89), ‘My Last Duchess’
- William Butler Yeats (1865—1939), ‘Leda and the Swan’
- T. S. Eliot (1888—1965), ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’
- Wilfred Owen (1893—1918), ‘Dulce Et Decorum Est’
- W. H. Auden (1907—73), ‘The Shield of Achilles’
- Philip Larkin (1922-1985), `The Trees?
- Tony Harrison (1937—), ‘A Kumquat for John Keats’ (LION) http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctxver=Z39.88-2003&xri:pqil:resver=0.2&resid=xri:lion&rftid=xri:lion:ft:po:Z400598886:4
- Seamus Heaney (1939—), ‘Punishment’
- Carol Ann Duffy (1955—), ‘Prayer’ (LION) http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctxver=Z39.88-2003&xri:pqil:resver=0.2&resid=xri:lion&rftid=xri:lion:ft:po:Z200593189:2
[Recommended secondary literature (NB not obligatory):
- James Fenton, An Introduction to English Poetry (Penguin, 2002)
- Jeremy Hawthorn, Studying the Novel, 5th edn (Hodder Arnold, 2005)]