PULS
Foto: Matthias Friel
Please follow the "comment" link above for more information on comments, course readings, course requirements and grading.This online course will be largely based on asynchronous learning, but it will include a few synchronous elements. Please make sure you'll be able to meet up online once a month during course hours. The dates for these Zoom calls will be announced at the beginning of the lecture period. They will most likely take place at the beginning of each month. Some degree of flexibility will be allowed due to small group meetings rather than entire seminar Zooms.
This course is designed to give an overview of the many ways literature has engaged with economic theories over the last centuries. The focus will be on literature that has been critical towards various aspects (like gender, class and race) of economic trends. Among other texts, we will read Herman Melville's 'Bartleby, the Scriviner', F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'A Diamond as Big as the Ritz', Charles Dickens's 'A Christmas Carol', Jane Austen's Sense and Sensibility and Jean Rhys's Voyage in the Dark alongside critical literature. The readings will be divided into three sections: theory (Nov), novellas (Dec), novels (Jan-Feb). You will get assignments for each reading.
Je nach der jeweiligen StO und PULS Belegung:
3LP: Essay, ca. 4 Seiten, 2.000 Wörter
6 LP: Essay, ca. 8 Seiten, 4.000 Wörter
9 LP: Essay, ca. 12 Seiten, ca. 6.000 Wörter und Thesenpapier
Erasmus: Analog zu dieser Aufschlüsselung, nach Bedarf der Home University/ des Learning Agreements
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