N.B.:
THIS CODE WAS CREATED SPECIFICALLY FOR ERASMUS STUDENTS who need a grade for this course.
The course is only open to DALC incoming Erasmus students.
The seminar focuses on the dynamics between tradition and innovation in Irish literature since the ‘revivals’ at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth century. Due attention will be given to the phenomenon of modernism (defined very broadly) as an approach to tradition that yields innovative results. The course discusses both English-language classics and relatively less known authors in the Irish language, paying attention to the interactions between the two literary cultures. Knowledge of the Irish language is welcome, but not necessary, as the relevant texts will be made available also in English (or Czech) translations.
SCHEDULE
Week 1 (7/10) Introduction, Irish Literary Revival
Week 2 (14/10) No class (workshop)
Week 3 (21/10) Irish Literary Revival
Read: J. M. Synge, The Playboy of the Western World, The Shadow of the Glen
Week 4 (28/10) No class (national holiday)
Week 5 (4/11) Gaelic Revival
Read: Pádraic Ó Conaire, Deoraíocht / Exile
Week 6 (11/11) James Joyce & Tradition
Read: James Joyce, “Cyclops,” Ulysses
Week 7 (18/11) Irish-language Autobiographies
Read: Tomás Ó Criomhthain, An tOileánach / The Islander (selection)
Seosamh Mac Grianna, Mo Bhealach Féin / My Own Journey (chapters 1, 2, 12)
Week 8 (25/11) Flann O’Brien’s An Béal Bocht
Read: Flann O’Brien, An Béal Bocht / The Poor Mouth
Week 9 (2/12) Tradition and Innovation in Irish Music
Read: Seán Ó Riada: Our Musical Heritage (selection)
Week 10 (9/12) Máirtín Ó Cadhain’s Cré na Cille
Read: Máirtín Ó Cadhain, Cré na Cille / Graveyard Clay (at least the first three interludes)
Week 11 (16/12) Máirtín Ó Cadhain & Samuel Beckett
Read: Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot
Weeks 12 (6/1) Modernist Approaches to History
Read: Stewart Parker, Northern Star
CREDIT REQUIREMENTS 1. Regular attendance and active participation in debates (based on the assigned reading). A maximum of 2 unexplained absences is allowed. 2. Submission of draft answers to the assigned questions on a week-to-week basis. These may have the form of notes or a short text, the recommended length is about 300 words. Please send them to radvan.markus@ff.cuni.cz by 8:00 on the day of the given class. 3. A final essay (minimal length 3 000 words), submitted by e-mail in MS Word format (or compatible). Deadline for essays: 31 January.
Students wishing to be awarded an exam grade in the course are required to submit, in addition to the above, a graded research paper (min. 5000 words).
Essay topics must be discussed with the instructor in advance.
PLEASE NOTE: Essays must include full bibliographical references and footnotes for all works cited or paraphrased (in accordance with the MLA style – consult “essay guidelines” on the department website). Students are advised not to use Internet sources in place of adequately researching texts available in print. Plagiarism will not be tolerated and will result in a fail grade.