ENGL 325 A: Early Modern Literature

Summer 2022 B-term
Meeting:
to be arranged / * *
SLN:
14313
Section Type:
Lecture
Instructor:
ADD CODE FROM INSTRUCTOR PD 3 ASYNCHRONOUS LEARNING
Syllabus Description (from Canvas):

Summer B Term 2022                English 325a                     W.R. Streitberger                     ZOOM                                Early Modern English Literature                         streitwr@

 

This course will be taught entirely on ZOOM. Students may participate either in a synchronous course OR in an asynchronous course.

Those students taking the course synchronously will meet with me in ZOOM every M, Tu, W, and Th from 9:40 to 11:50. Those students taking the course asynchronously will view the cloud recordings of those sessions.

All students must take the exams on 4 August and 18 August. The exams will  be given online NOT ON CAMPUS. I will email the exams to the class at 9:00 am. You must complete your exams by 10:40 and email them back to me at that time.

The course includes English literature and drama from the early sixteenth through the mid-seventeenth century. This period is sometimes described as “Early Modern” because so much of our own culture has been significantly affected by the intellectual, scientific, literary, and cultural developments of the period. It is the period in which Sir Thomas More wrote Utopia; the period in which Wyatt, Surrey, Sidney Donne, and Wroth produced some the most memorable lyric poetry; it was the period in which the two most important English epic poems were written--Spenser’s The Faerie Queene and Milton’s Paradise Lost; and it was the age that produced some of the greatest dramatists in all of Western history. Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, and other dramatic poets were responsible for the greatest outpouring of tragic and comic art since the 5th century BC in Athens.

 

Our class meetings will consist of lectures and discussions about the material assigned for each day. For that material see the Syllabus and the Discussion Questions which provide a day-by-day list of our readings and the questions about them that we will discuss. Use the discussion questions to help guide your reading. Answer the questions and come to class prepared to discuss them.

The exams will be divided into three sections: Part I will include fifteen multiple choice and true/false questions, definitions, fill-in-the-blanks, etc. (2 points each for a total of 30 points). Part II will ask you to identify and to explain the significance of seven out of ten well-known passages from the works have read (7 points each for a total of 49 points). Part III will ask you to write two detailed paragraphs on more general questions of the kind we have been discussing in class (10 points each for a total of 20 points) .

The keys to success in the course lie in answering the study questions and in attending/viewing our class sessions. Only material found in the study questions or discussed in class will be included on the exams.

We will use email to communicate with one another. You must check your UW email every day during the term. When you submit work to me via email it must be to my UW email address (streitwr@uw.edu). DO NOT SEND YOUR EMAIL THROUGH CANVAS. All attachments must by in WORD. No other attachments of any kind are acceptable.

TEXT:  The Norton Anthology of English Literature, The Sixteenth Century, The Early Seventeenth Century, 10th edition  (available from UW Bookstore and elsewhere)

REQUIREMENTS                                                                                             

One five page essay on a topic related to the course. Use any of the discussion questions as a prompt. Due Friday 12 August (50%).

Two 1 hour exams, one on 4 August and one on 18 August (50%).

SCHEDULE

Week 1                                                                                                                                                                       21 July  Introduction                                                                                                                   

Week 2                                                                                                                                                                  25 July  Sir Thomas More, Utopia                                                                                                                  26 July Utopia                                                                                                                                                        27 July Sir Francis Bacon, New Atlantis 1231-36. Baldassare Castiglione, The Courtier, 176-192. Michele de Montaigne, ‘Of the Inconstancy of our Actions’ (read this online).                                                                28 July Shakespeare Sonnets 1, 18, 73. Sir Thomas Wyatt and the Earl of Surrey, Poems, found in pages 119-142.                                                                                                            

Week 3                                                                                                                                                                   1 August Sir Philip Sidney, Sonnets, 586-603. Shakespeare, Sonnets  (those between 1 and 126), 722-38                                                                                                                                                                2 August Shakespeare, Sonnets (those between 127 and 152). Mary Wroth, Pamphilia to Amphilanthus,1116-1121. John Donne, ‘The Flea’, ‘Air and Angels’, ‘The Ecstasy’, ‘The Canonization’, ‘A Valediction Forbidding Mourning’, Holy Sonnets 5, 10, 14, found between pages 923 and 963                      3 August Amelia Lanyer, ‘Eve’s Apology’, 908-986. Sir Philip Sidney, The Defense of Poetry, 546-47, 551-54, 556—57, 564-67, 570-72, 574-75, 578-81. Edmund Spenser, ‘Letter to Sir Walter Raleigh’, Induction to The Faerie Queene, 249-54.                                                                                                         4 August  EXAM 1                                                                                                      

Week 4                                                                                                                                                               8 August. The Faerie Queene, Book I, canto 1, stanzas 1-55 (Error and Archimago). Book I, canto 4, stanzas 1-36 (House of Pride), canto 9, stanzas 1-19 (Arthur’s story), canto 9, stanzas  21-54 (Cave of Despair)                                                                                                                                                           9 August Faerie Queene, Book I, canto 10, stanzas 1-68 (House of Holiness). Book I, canto 11, stanzas 28-36, 44-52 (the Well of Life and the Tree of Life), canto 12, stanzas 24-36 (Betrothal of Red Cross and Una, Binding of Archimago). Book II, canto 12, stanzas 42-87 (Bower of Bliss) 

10 August John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book I, 1-26, 27-49, 50-74, 91-107, 196-210, 242-63, 375-662  (Invocation, the Cause, Hell, Satan as leader, epic simile—Leviathan, Satan’s determination, epic catalogue of devils), Book II, 1-6 , 226, 283, 299, 370-89, 629-844, 1025-1055 (Parliament in Pandemonium, the new plan of attack, encounter with Sin and Death, Satan’s first glimpse of the created universe), Book IV, 440-91, 610-752 (Eve’s birth and reflection, work and sex in paradise)                                                                                                      

11 August Paradise Lost Book V, 1-135, 600-615, 519-47, 249-368, 452-617 (Eve’s dream, Exaltation of the Son, Creation of Adam, Adam’s consciousness, Creation of Eve), Book VII 519-47, 110-30, 139-61 (creation of Adam, on knowledge, God’s motive for creation), Book VIII 249-51, 452-90, 530-639 (Adam’s consciousness, creation of Eve, on controlling passion),  Book IX, 479-1134 (the Fall, postlapsarian sex and relationships)                                                                                                                          12 August Christopher Marlowe, Dr. Faustus, 679-717. ESSAY due

Week 5                                                                                                                                                            15 August 1st hour;  Dr. Faustus.         :                                                                                                            16 August Ben Jonson, Volpone, 991-1088                                                                                                                                   17 August Volpone                                                                                                                                         18 August EXAM 2

 

Discussion Questions

WEEK 1

21 July Introduction

 

WEEK 2

25 July. Utopia

1st hour. Book I

  1. What are Hythloday’s reasons for not taking a position as advisor to a prince? How do most princes behave? What kind of advice do they get from their counselors? What is Hythloday’s idea of an ideal prince? Why does he think it is important that princes become philosophers?
  2. What economic "evil" is spreading and how is it related to the crime wave sweeping England? What ideas does Hythloday offer to solve these economic and social problems? What is the source of the model he uses for his solution? How are his ideas connected to Christian morality?
  3. What idea does Cardinal Morton contribute to Raphael’s suggestion about criminal punishment? How good is his idea? How do the Cardinal’s counselors respond to it?

2nd hour. Book II

  1. Economy. What does Hythloday think is the problem with using money as a means of exchange? How is the Utopian economy organized? What human trait is it designed to keep in check?
  2. Work. How do the Utopians reduce the amount of work each person is required to do? How do they nevertheless insure an adequate supply of food and materials? How important is free time? How does slavery figure into their notion of work (in addition to criminal justice)? 3. Social Organization. Describe the cities, the houses, the family units in Utopia. How are the people supervised? How much personal freedom do they have?

 

26 July

1st hour

  1. Politics. How is the Utopian political system organized? Who decides what? How are their political practices designed to keep human pride in check? What is the role of lawyers in Utopia? How are legal disputes handled?
  2. Philosophy. What is the goal of life in Utopia? How is pleasure defined? How many different kinds are there? Which ones are most important? Why?
  3. Religion. What kinds of religion do the Utopians practice? How do they react to Christianity?

2nd hour

  1. Warfare. How do they regard treaties? What motives lead Utopians to consider war? What methods do they use to demoralize and defeat their enemies before a war starts? What is the role of women and families in warfare? What group of mercenaries do they employ (What group of Europeans is More alluding to)? When the Utopians win a war who do they execute and who do they reward?
  2. How do Utopians treat certain classes of people—criminals, the terminally ill, extremists (like

Atheists, ascetics, zealous evangelizers)?

  1. What are Hythloday’s view on private property in Books I and II? What are More’s (the character) views? What human trait makes it difficult to institute the views and practices of the Utopians?

Finally: What can you deduce from the discussion on Pride at the end of Book II about More’s view of human nature? How is the structure of Utopian society designed to accord with this view?

 

27 July.

1st hour: Bacon, New Atlantis, Castiglione, The Courtier.

  1. Compare and contrast More’s and Bacon’s utopian visions in Utopia and New Atlantis.
  2. Explain Castiglione's conception of the human soul (or self). How is knowledge is acquired by the soul? How does reason function in his conception?
  3. How does Peter Bembo define love? Explain the steps (cf. the stair image) by which the reason guides love. How does kissing enhance "true" love.

2nd hour: Montaigne, Of the Inconstancy of Our Actions

1.How does Montaigne characterize human actions? What does he find most puzzling

about them?

2.What does Montaigne think is the ordinary inclination of the human appetite?

3.When he looks inside of himself (into his ‘interiority’, his self) what does Montaigne find? How does his description accord with 20th and 21st century notions of the ‘self’?

 

28 July.

1st hour: 1. Lecture: The importance of Francis Petrarch’s sonnets.

  1. Who is the “we” of the first line in Shakespeare’s sonnet 1?
  2. What is the rhyme scheme in sonnets 18 and 73.

2nd hour: 1. Examine the experiments with translations and adaptions of Petrarch’s sonnets: Wyatt’s ‘Whoso List to Hunt,’ ‘Farewell Love,’ ‘I Find No Peace’, ‘My Galley,’ Surrey’s ‘The Soote Season’ and “Alas, so all thinges now do hold their peace’. Then specifically compare Wyatt’s ‘The Long Love’ to Surrey’s ‘Love That Doth Reign.’ They are both adaptations of Petrarch, Rhyme 140. How would you define the differences in style and sensibility between these poets?

  1. Compare and contrast Wyatt’s ‘They Flee from Me’ to the later published version, ‘The Lover

Showeth How he is Forsaken.’ Which do you prefer and why?

  1. Read Wyatt’s ‘Mine Own John Poins’, a satirical verse epistle, and Surrey’s excerpt from ‘The Fourth Book of Virgil’ in which he pioneers blank verse. Which of these poets do you prefer and why?

 

WEEK 3

1 August

1st hour. Sir Philip Sidney.  

1.How does Sidney rebel against Petrarchan conventions in sonnets 1, 2, and 15? What

about the imagery Sidney uses in sonnets 7 and 47? How disappointing is sonnet 108?

  1. What is your opinion of Sidney’s attempt to personalize his relationship with Stella in

sonnets 49, 53,and 74.

  1. Look at Sidney’s adaption of neo-Platonic ideas (you are familiar with them from

Reading Castiglione’s The Courtier) in sonnets 10, 21, 52, 71, 72. What model would you use to characterize the interiority of the speaker of these poems?

2nd hour.

Shakespeare's sonnets are not arranged into a coherent series. The sonnets treat a variety of

Subjects: procreation; friendship; the ravages of time and change; the difficulty of writing; the power of poetry to immortalize its subject; the rival poet; and an obsessive relationship with the so-called ‘dark lady.’ There are only two clear groups: 1-17 and 127-152.

  1. In sonnets 1, 3, 12, 15 the poet encourages a young man to have a child. Why is it so important to have a child? How many reasons does he give for this?
  2. All of the sonnets, 1-126, are written to or about one or more young men. Try to explain the range of emotions the poet expresses about his friend in sonnets 20, 30, 97, 116. How complex does the poet imagine the emotional relationship between men to be? How different from your own notions of friendship?
  3. How does the poet in sonnets 12, 18, 19, 55, 73, 116 deal with the effects of time on

relationships? Explalin how Time’s destructive power affects emotions in relationships?

 

2 August

1st hour

  1. Many of the ‘dark lady’ poems focus on contradiction. 127 and 130 take one view of the lady’s complexion and their relationship and 147 takes another. 129 focuses on one view of their sexual relationship and 135 another. How does the poet explain his relationship to the lady in sonnet in 138 and to the lady and his friend in 144? What view of his relationship to the lady are you left with?
  2. How might you use what you learned from Montaigne’s Inconstancy of our Actions to help explain Shakespeare’s idea of the poet’s interiority in these sonnets?
  3. How well does Mary Wroth adapt Petrarchan sonnet conventions in Pamphilia to Amphilanthus in which the speaker is a women? Compare these poems to Shakespeare’s Dark lady sonnets?

Finally: Compare and contrast the dark lady sonnets to Sidney’s Astrophil and Stella and to Petrarch’s Rhymes. In what ways are the lovers and the ladies similar? In what ways different? What do you think that Shakespeare expects his “qualified readers (i.e. the “we” of line 1, sonnet 1)” to get out of them? How might they have contributed to his literary reputation as an avant-garde poet? 

2nd hour

  1. Follow the ‘metaphysical ‘imagery (the fusion of sexual love and religious imagery) in Donne’s ‘The Flea’, ‘The Canonization’, ‘The Good-Morrow’, and ‘The Ecstasy’. Connect this to Holy Sonnet 14 (‘Batter my heart …’). What are the similarities, implications?
  2. ‘A Valediction’ is thought to contain the finest examples of ‘metaphysical ‘imagery. Connect this to Holy Sonnet 10 (‘Death be not proud…’). The similarities, implications?

 

3 August

1st hour. . Lanyer, ‘Eve’s Apology’. Sidney, The Defense of Poesy

  1. What observations in Amelia Lanyer’s ‘Eve’s Apology’ do you find most compelling? 2. According to Sidney what is the definition of poetry? What does poetry imitate? How is it different from history and philosophy?
  2. How does Sidney defend against attacks on poetry—that there are better things to do with your time, that it is the ‘mother of lies,’ that it is the ‘nurse of abuse,’ and that Plato banished poets from his Republic? How does he argue for the social usefulness of poetry?
  3. What are Sidney's views on English poetry and poets? What does he think of English drama?

2nd  hour. Spenser, The Faerie Queene

  1. According to Spenser's letter to Sir Walter Raleigh, what is the point of The Faerie Queene? What does Spenser mean by allegory? Who are the two chief characters and who/what do they represent? How is the plot arranged?

2.What do you learn from the Induction?

 

WEEK 4

8 August. 1st hour

  1. In FQ I, Red Cross is on a quest for holiness. If this is Red Cross's first mission, why is his armor in this condition (I.i.1)? What implications for interpreting the allegory? Who is Una? Who is the dragon? How might the significance of the battle with Error (I.i.13-27) be interpreted?
  2. After the defeat of Error, Red Cross accepts Archimago's invitation to spend the night at his hermitage. Spenser goes back to Virgil for inspiration in writing about the underworld. What dream is manufactured by Morpheus (I.i.34-55)? How do you interpret it?
  3. After his separation from Una, Red Cross meets Duessa (Falsehood) and accompanies her to Lucifera's House of Pride (I.iv.4-5, 12). How is this house described? What effect does contact with the 7 deadly sins have on Red Cross’s moral character? (I.iv.16-36).

2nd  hour

  1. What is Prince Arthur’s story (I.ix.1-19)? Why is he in fairy land? Relate his explanation to what you know about Neoplatonism. What gifts does he give to Red Cross? What is their significance?
  2. What are the stories of Sir Terwin and Sir Trevisan? How does Red Cross react to the advice to avoid Despair? How good are Despair's arguments for suicide (esp. I.ix.46)?
  3. How does Una save Red Cross from Despair? Explain the allegory.

 

9 August

1st hour

  1. Compare and contrast the House of Holiness with the House of Pride. Interpret Red Cross’s vision (I.x.55-62). See Revelation, 20-22
  2. In the three day battle with the great dragon in canto 11, Red Cross is almost vanquished several times. What revives him? What is Spenser alluding to in the book of Revelation?
  3. In I.xii.26-42 Red Cross is betrothed to Una, but cannot marry her. Why not?

2nd hour.

 In FQ II, Sir Guyon is on a quest for the virtue of temperance. With the Palmer's help he arrives at the Bower of Bliss in canto II.xii.42.

1.How is this Bower described? Where is it located? Explain the allegorical significance.

  1. What kind of a character is Acrasia? What does she do to her victims? Explain her allegorical significance.

3.Why does Guyon only bind Acrasia? Why does he feel it necessary to destroy the Bower? Explain the allegory.

 

10 August

1st hour

1.What muse does Milton invoke to inspire him in writing Paradise Lost? What was his goal in writing the poem?  How is Hell described.

  1. What kind of leader is Satan? What kind of epic similes are used to describe him?
  2. How are the other devils portrayed here? What roles do they have in history?

2nd hour

  1. How is Satan related to Sin, Death, and Hell? How do you interpret this as an allegory?
  2. How does Milton portray Eve’s consciousness of her birth and first meeting with Adam?
  3. How is work and sex portrayed in paradise?

 

11 August

1st hour

  1. How naturalistic is Milton’s rendering of Eve’s dream? How does it affect you?
  2. How does Milton portray Adam’s consciousness and his first discussion with God?
  3. What is God’s motive for creation? How does Raphael suggest that Adam control his passion? Where else have you heard this explanation?

2nd hour

1.How does Milton attempt to make the fall into a tragedy? (Be sure you can define tragedy as a literary/dramatic form ).

2.What is Eve’s motive for eating the fruit? What is Adam’s motive? What literary tradition is Milton drawing on to describe the fall? 

  1. What parts of the poem do you think might lend themselves to representation in a 1950’s Hollywood epic? See the last few lines of the poem in Book XII.

 

12 August

Marlowe, Dr. Faustus

Jonathan Dollimore comments on the play: ‘One problem in particular has exercised critics of Dr. Faustus: its structure, inherited from the morality form, apparently negates what the play experientially affirms--the heroic aspiration of `Renaissance Man'.... Critical opinion has tended to see the tension resolved in one way or another--that is, to read the play as ultimately vindicating either Faustus or the morality structure, But such resolution is what Dr. Faustus as an interrogative text resists. It seems always to represent paradox--religious and tragic--as insecurely and provocatively ambiguous or, worse, as openly contradictory.... Dr. Faustus is ... not an affirmation of Divine Law, or conversely of Renaissance Man, but an exploration of subversion through transgression.’

1st hour

  1. What does the Chorus tell us about Faustus's background: his family, his success in school? To what does the metaphor in the Prologue lines 20-23 refer?
  2. Why does Faustus reject Logic, Medicine, and Law as careers? Pay careful attention to his reasons for rejecting Divinity.
  3. What is Faustus's idea of hell (3.58-60, 5.115-136)? Where might he have gotten such an idea? How much power does Faustus actually have? How much knowledge does he get from Mephostiphilis?

2nd hour

1.What is Marlowe parodying in the contract with Lucifer (5.74-81)?

  1. What is the continuing debate between the good and bad angels about? Hasn’t’ Faustus already damned himself?
  2. How significant are Faustus's accomplishments? See especially his pranks at the Papal court (7); his show of Alexander's paramour to the Emperor (9); his antics with the horse-courser (10); his production of grapes for the Duchess of Vanholt (11)?

 

WEEK 5

15 August. Dr Faustus

1st hour

1 Explain the effect of the obviously comic scenes--4 (Wagner and the Clown), 6 (Rafe and Robin). How related to the main plot?

2.How does the juxtaposition of Helen of Troy and the Old Man (12) pick up on the debate

between Good and Bad Angel?

2nd hour.

  1. In what way is Helen of Troy an appropriate temptation?
  2. Read the last scene carefully. Why the mix of biblical and classical allusions?
  3. Finally, Define tragedy. In what way is Faustus tragic?

 

16 August

On the difference between Jonson and Shakespeare, Neville Coghill observes, ‘Compared with the comedies of Shakespeare, those of Ben Jonson are no laughing matter. A harsh ethic in them yokes punishment with derision; foibles are persecuted and vices flayed; the very simpletons are savaged for being what they are. The population ... [of] his comedies ... is a congeries of ... mountebanks, cozeners, dupes, braggarts, bullies, and bitches. No one loves anyone ....

            In Shakespeare things are different. Princes and dukes, lords and ladies, jostle with merchants, weavers, joiners, country sluts, friendly rouges, schoolmasters, and village policemen, hardly one of whom is incapable of a generous impulse.’ Coghill states that faced with these two visions of life ‘a writer is wise if he follows his own temperament. Ben Jonson knotted his cat-o'-nine tails. Shakespeare reached for his Chaucer.’

            Jonson is credited with originating this kind of satiric comedy, of which Volpone is his masterpiece. It is sometimes referred to as a comedy of "humors" (a contemporary medical and psychological term) because each of his characters is obsessed with seeing life from a single point of view.

1st hour

  1. Examine the opening speech by Volpone and the rest by Mosca and Volpone's servants (I.i.1-81). What kind of imagery does Volpone associate with his treasure?
  2. What does Volpone value above gold? Why? What do Voltore, Corbaccio, and Corvnio value? What are they willing to sacrifice for it?
  3. What did you find most amusing about Volpone’s role as Scoto of Mantua? How does he feel about Celia?

2nd  hour

  1. In the characters of Sir Politick and Lady Would-be Jonson is satirizing the so called ‘Englishman Italianated.’ How smart are these characters? What effect does this subplot have on the play? How relevant is it?

 2.The seduction of Celia is accompanied by the song, ‘Come my Celia, let us

prove …,’ a famous poem on the theme of carpe diem. How interested do you think Volpone finds Celia? How do you know?     

  1. Volpone tells us that he did act in a play (3.7.162), and he certainly does a lot of acting in this play: he plays the role of a dying man (1.4, 1;5, 4.6), he plays the role of Scoto of Mantua (2.1), he wants to act out his sexual fantasies with Celia (3.7), later he plays the role of a dead person (5.3) and of a court official. How does acting become a metaphor for the plays themes? Occasionally Volpone senses that he has gone too far (3.8.15-22, 5.1.1-17, 5.11.1-9). Why does he continue?

 

17 August

1st hour

  1. How is Mosca’s and Volpone’s love of deceit presented (3.1.1-9, 5.2..10-11, 111. 5.3.102-8). What image best expresses the pleasure they get from victimizing people? How might the 1st Avocatore’s comment (5.12.101-2) relate to this?

2.Did you find any honest characters in the play other than Bonario and Celia? What about the judges (avocatori)? What does this indicate about the play’s world or universe?

3.Nevertheless, Celia and Bonario believe that Heaven is just. How does Jonson make you believe that? What does the 1st Avocatore’s comment mean "Mischiefs feed/ Like beasts, till they be fat, and then they bleed."?

2nd  hour.

1.How appropriate to a comedy are the various punishments given to the malefactors?

  1. According to Coleridge the play would have been better if Celia and Bonario were made

young lovers. Evaluate this observation.

 

 

Catalog Description:
Covers selected poetry, prose, and/or drama from the English Renaissance through the English Civil War and Commonwealth. Readings may include Petrarchism and the early English laureates, early defenses of poesy, the first essays, works by Shakespeare and/or his contemporaries, the metaphysical poets, Milton, and early transatlantic writers such as Anne Bradstreet.
GE Requirements Met:
Arts and Humanities (A&H)
Credits:
5.0
Status:
Active
Last updated:
August 14, 2024 - 9:53 am