الخطوط العريضة للقسم

      • 📘 Course Card
        British Literature: From Romanticism to Contemporary Voices
        🎓 Degree Program
        English Literature / Civilization and Literature
        📆 Semester
        Semester 2
        📦 Unit Name
        Fundamental Unit
        📖 Course Title
        History of British Literature
        👥 Target Audience
        MASTER 1  Students in English Studies / Civilization and Literature
        🎓 Credits
        04
        🔢 Coefficient
        02
        ⏰ Contact Hours
        42 Hours
        📝 Assessment Method
        Final Exam (100%)
      •         This course provides a comprehensive exploration of British literature from the late eighteenth century to the contemporary period, examining major literary movements such as Romanticism, Victorian literature, Modernism, Postmodernism, and contemporary global writing. It focuses on how literary texts reflect and critically engage with historical, social, and cultural transformations, including industrialization, war, identity construction, and globalization.

        Through the study of key authors and representative works, the course emphasizes the evolution of literary forms, narrative techniques, and thematic concerns. It highlights the shift from emotional and imaginative expression in Romanticism to social critique in Victorian realism, followed by fragmentation and experimentation in Modernism and Postmodernism.

        By integrating critical theories such as feminism, postcolonialism, and cultural studies, the course encourages students to develop analytical and interpretive skills. Ultimately, it aims to foster a deeper understanding of literature as both an artistic practice and a powerful tool for interpreting the complexities of human experience in a changing world.

        Keywords

        British Literature; Romanticism; Victorian Literature; Modernism; Postmodernism; Globalization; Literary Analysis; Cultural Studies; Feminism; Postcolonialism

      • 🎯 Course Objectives

        📌 General Objective
        By the end of this course, students will be able to deepen their understanding of British literature and its key movements and texts, analyse literary works within their historical and cultural contexts, and develop critical reading and academic writing skills.
        📘 Specific Objectives (per lecture)
        L1: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain the foundations of Romanticism.
        L2: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to describe the poetic vision of Wordsworth and Coleridge.
        L3: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to interpret themes of individualism and rebellion.
        L4: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain Gothic elements in literature.
        L5: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to summarize the impact of industrialization.
        L6: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain realism and its social context.
        L7: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to describe the principles of Aestheticism.
        L8: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain early Modernist developments.
        L9: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to describe the stream-of-consciousness technique.
        L10: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain themes of fragmentation and crisis.
        L11: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to describe characteristics of Postmodernism.
        L12: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain feminist and postcolonial perspectives.
        L13: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to describe the impact of globalization on literature.
        L14: By the end of the lecture, students will be able to explain trends in contemporary literature.