Sumários

Modernism/s and the war – the quest for different ways of addressing literature and reality.The short story - a genre for the twentieth century? Or traditions encounter new forms. Joyce and his Dubliners, ‘The Dead’ (1914). Epiphany, free indirect discourse, interior monologue.

16 Outubro 2017, 08:00 Luísa Maria Rodrigues Flora

Modernism/s and the war – the quest for different ways of addressing literature and reality.


The short story - a genre for the twentieth century? Or traditions encounter new forms. 
Joyce and his Dubliners, ‘The Dead’ (1914).
Epiphany, free indirect discourse, interior monologue.


Reading and reflecting upon the literary representation of war. Modernism/s and the war – the quest for different ways of addressing literature and reality.

11 Outubro 2017, 08:00 Luísa Maria Rodrigues Flora


Reading and reflecting upon the literary representation of war. 

Modernism/s and the war – the quest for different ways of addressing literature and reality.


Reading and reflecting upon the literary representation of war.

9 Outubro 2017, 08:00 Luísa Maria Rodrigues Flora

Reading and reflecting upon the literary representation of war. 


Reading and discussing in class, with special attention devoted to:Rupert Brooke, ‘Rain’ (1916), Siegfried Sassoon, ‘They’ (1916, 1917),Isaac Rosenberg, ‘Break of Day in the Trenches' (1916, publ.1922)Wilfred Owen, ‘Strange Meeting' (May? 1918, publ.1920).

4 Outubro 2017, 08:00 Luísa Maria Rodrigues Flora

Reading and discussing in class, with special attention devoted to:Rupert Brooke, ‘Rain’ (1916), Siegfried Sassoon, ‘They’ (1916, 1917),Isaac Rosenberg, ‘Break of Day in the Trenches' (1916, publ.1922)Wilfred Owen, ‘Strange Meeting' (May? 1918, publ.1920).


Reading in class of extracts from ‘War Poetry: A Conversation’ with Michael Longley, Andrew Motion and Jon Stallworthy, edited by Santanu Das in The Cambridge Companion to The Poetry of the First World War, Cambridge: CUP, 2013, 257-67.                                    


Andrew Motion reading and discussing the tradition of First World War poetry. New realities and a new poetry.

2 Outubro 2017, 08:00 Luísa Maria Rodrigues Flora

Andrew Motion reading and discussing the tradition of First World War poetry.


New realities and a new poetry.   
                         
Introducing some poets and poems of the First World War, with special attention devoted to: Rupert Brooke, ‘Rain’ (1916), Siegfried Sassoon, ‘They’ (1916, 1917),Isaac Rosenberg, ‘Break of Day in the Trenches' (1916, publ.1922)Wilfred Owen, ‘Strange Meeting' (May? 1918, publ.1920).