Zur Seitennavigation oder mit Tastenkombination für den accesskey-Taste und Taste 1 
Zum Seiteninhalt oder mit Tastenkombination für den accesskey und Taste 2 
  1. WiSe 2024/25
  2. Hilfe
  3. Sitemap
Switch to english language
Startseite    Anmelden     
Logout in [min] [minutetext]

Strukturbaum
Keine Einordnung ins Vorlesungsverzeichnis vorhanden. Veranstaltung ist aus dem Semester WiSe 2014/15 , Aktuelles Semester: WiSe 2024/25
  • Funktionen:
Always Look on the Bright Side of Life: English Musical Humour from the Seventeenth Century to Monty Python    Sprache: Englisch    Belegpflicht
(Keine Nummer) Hauptseminar     WiSe 2014/15     2 SWS     jedes Semester    
   Lehreinheit: Anglistik    
   Teilnehmer/-in  Maximal : 12  
 
   Zugeordnete Lehrperson:   Heyl
 
 
Zur Zeit keine Belegung möglich
   Termin: Mittwoch   14:00  -  16:00    wöch.
Beginn : 22.10.2014   
  
  R11 T07 C94
 
 
 
   Kommentar:

There appears to be a specifically British tradition of British musical humour. In this seminar, we are going to look at the emergence and developments of this tradition. We shall study (and listen to) seventeenth-century songs, the Beggar’s Opera (by Gay and Pepusch) and similar eighteenth-century works, The Pirates of Penzance, Ruddigore and The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan, music hall songs of the 19th century and material of much more recent origin. You will meet any number of funny singing pirates, Japanese princesses, ghosts, sorcerers, men and women from London’s East End … and of course a not altogether serious character called Brian singing about looking on the bright side of life while being executed.

A reader with material from the seventeenth century to the Victorian era will be made available well in advance of the semester (available from the usual place in Reckhammerweg).

            Requirements: regular attendance, reading the assigned texts, active participation, and written work according to your particular Studienordnung. As always: read, think, enjoy (!!), annotate (!) and look things up if necessary.