05.874.132 Cultural Studies III - English Literature and Culture Wales

Veranstaltungsdetails
Schließen 

Lehrende/r: Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig

Veranstaltungsart: Übung

Anzeige im Stundenplan: 05.874.132

Semesterwochenstunden: 2

Credits: 4,0

Unterrichtssprache: Englisch

Min. | Max. Teilnehmerzahl: - | 50

Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
Teilnahmevorraussetzungen:

Gute Englischkenntnisse
 

Anwesenheitspflicht:
keine

Inhalt:
This lecture will cover an often ignored part of Britain and its culture. Wales, which sometimes claims to be England's first colony, has a language of its own and participates in many literary and cultural developments of the British Isles, not only in the early period of the so-called "Dark Ages". There, the myths surrounding King Arthur and his seemingly ideal rule permeated the whole of Britain and much of Europe. But also in the Middle Ages Wales was home to a lively literature that is often much less stuffy than that of its English and European neighbours. This continues via the Renaissance, when a Welsh dynasty, the Tudors, were on the English throne, through the Enlightemnent and eighteenth and nineteenth centuries into the period of Industrialisation, when Wales was at the forefront of modernisation. In the 20th and 21st centuries, Wales' status was troubled again. The crisis of industry in Britain, the World Wars, the recession of the 1970s and more recent economic downturns hit the country hard. At the same time, they paved the way for a devolution that is now under threat again after Brexit.
The lecture will combine historic and cultural developments with their literary and also media counterparts, including films and TV series. It will introduce students to texts written in Welsh and English (the former in translation) in all genres and on a vast number of topics. It hopes that at the end of the lecture students will have found their own answer to a Welsh historian's provocative question, "When was Wales?"

Empfohlene Literatur:
Geraint H. Jenkins, A Concise History of Wales (Cambridge et al.: Cambridge University Press, 2007)

Zusätzliche Informationen:
Prüfungsform:

Klausur am Vorlesungsende
 

Digitale Lehre:
Die Powerpointfolien und eine Audioaufzeichnung der Vorlesungen stehen auf LMS zur Verfügung.

Termine
Datum Von Bis Raum Lehrende/r
1 Mo, 23. Okt. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
2 Mo, 30. Okt. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
3 Mo, 6. Nov. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
4 Mo, 13. Nov. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
5 Mo, 20. Nov. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
6 Mo, 27. Nov. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
7 Mo, 4. Dez. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
8 Mo, 11. Dez. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
9 Mo, 18. Dez. 2023 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
10 Mo, 8. Jan. 2024 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
11 Mo, 15. Jan. 2024 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
12 Mo, 22. Jan. 2024 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
13 Mo, 29. Jan. 2024 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
14 Mo, 5. Feb. 2024 10:15 11:45 00 181 P5 Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig
Veranstaltungseigene Prüfungen
Beschreibung Datum Lehrende/r Pflicht
1. Leistungsnachweis k.Terminbuchung Nein
Übersicht der Kurstermine
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Lehrende/r
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Rainer Emig