Jane Austen is an iconic figure, both within the academy and without. In the discipline of literary studies, her novels consolidate generic traditions that are both forward and backward looking. This unit examines Austen's novels in their historical and critical context in order to understand the place of her works, then and now. We will analyse how these novels engage the literary, social and political debates of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century. We will also investigate the interpretative traditions her work inaugurated in subsequent centuries and consider the reading processes that allow some novelists to escape their history.
Unit details and rules
| Academic unit | English and Writing |
|---|---|
| Credit points | 6 |
| Prerequisites
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12 credit points at 2000 level in English |
| Corequisites
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None |
|
Prohibitions
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ENGL1019 or ENGL2611 |
| Assumed knowledge
?
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None |
| Available to study abroad and exchange students | Yes |
Teaching staff
| Coordinator | Nicola Parsons, nicola.parsons@sydney.edu.au |
|---|---|
| Lecturer(s) | Nicola Parsons, nicola.parsons@sydney.edu.au |
| Tutor(s) | Matthew Sussman, matthew.sussman@sydney.edu.au |
| Olivia Murphy, olivia.murphy@sydney.edu.au |