Zur Seitennavigation oder mit Tastenkombination für den accesskey-Taste und Taste 1 
Zum Seiteninhalt oder mit Tastenkombination für den accesskey und Taste 2 
Startseite    Anmelden     
Logout in [min] [minutetext]

Figures, Matters, Images: Inventions of America in the Age of Enlightenment - Einzelansicht

  • Funktionen:
Grunddaten
Veranstaltungsart Vorlesung Langtext
Veranstaltungsnummer Kurztext
Semester SoSe 2026 SWS 2
Erwartete Teilnehmer/-innen Max. Teilnehmer/-innen 80
Credits Belegung Belegpflicht
Zeitfenster
Hyperlink
Sprache Englisch
Belegungsfristen Anglistik, erste Anmeldephase    10.03.2026 08:00:00 - 17.03.2026 08:00:00   
Einrichtung :
Anglistik
Anglistik, zweite Anmeldephase    19.03.2026 08:00:00 - 25.03.2026 08:00:00   
Einrichtung :
Anglistik
Termine Gruppe: [unbenannt] iCalendar Export für Outlook
  Tag Zeit Rhythmus Dauer Raum Raum-
plan
Status Bemerkung fällt aus am Max. Teilnehmer/-innen E-Learning
Einzeltermine anzeigen
iCalendar Export für Outlook
Mi. 14:00 bis 16:00 wöch. von 15.04.2026  S06S - S06 S00 B41     20.05.2026: Dear participants of the lecture on revolutionary times and their literary imaginary, since there is no in person meeting today please read the chapter carefully that is the basis of the lecture and the exam. All best, Ba Bu
Gruppe [unbenannt]:
Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
 


Zugeordnete Person
Zugeordnete Person Zuständigkeit
Buchenau, Barbara, Professorin, Dr.
Prüfungen / Module
Prüfungsnummer Prüfungsversion Modul
1601 Stud.Culture/Literature
Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen
Anglistik
Inhalt
Kommentar

The age of Enlightenment is famous today for the political and social revolutions it has brought forth in America, the Caribbean and France among others and it is famous for the new boost it gave to literature and the arts. The turn to the nineteenth century witnessed the emergence of the sciences as new professional fields with expanding canons of texts, images and material collections. Simultaneously, a new social and professional caste of writers, art-workers and public performers came forth to feed increasing appetites for the novel as a new form of fiction, for reading matter in the emerging domestic sphere and for illustrations as new forms of mass communication. What emerges in these contexts is a globally shared idea of “America” and a whole array of new technologies, arts and objects by which readers thought to grasp and command the world around them.

This lecture builds on the revolutionary era chapter of the Metzler Amerikanische Literaturgeschichte that I co-authored with Helmbrecht Breinig and Susanne Opfermann (edited by Timo Müller and Hubert Zapf, published by Metzler 2025). It will be made available for download. Participants are expected to read sections of this long chapter throughout the term and prepare notes and questions during the lecture. We will use the format of lecture and Q&A to discuss the ways in which literature “invented” (O’Gorman) the idea of an American republic (and its many flaws as well as novel strengths). In order to advance your analytical skills in literary studies, the lecture will pay special attention to the analysis of the figures, the images and the matters that people the literature of this particular era.

While thematically unified, this class will also develop key competences in literary and cultural studies, including Information Literacy (how to access secondary literature), Reading (how to use secondary literature), Inquiry & Analysis (how to analyze literary texts), and Written and Oral Communication (how to present your thoughts in your lecture notes, the Q&A sections and the portfolio (AmSt3) or oral exam (K, Ka)).

A Moodle room will be made available. The key is: Figures


Strukturbaum
Die Veranstaltung wurde 5 mal im Vorlesungsverzeichnis SoSe 2026 gefunden: