The Romantic Poets: Revolution and Retrospection

Jerry Hogle
WEDNESDAYS 9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
October 4 - December 13, 2017. No class on November 22.
Watch the video to learn more about this course

The Romantic Poets: Revolution and Retrospection

Fall 2017
In Session
WEDNESDAYS
9:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
October 4 - December 13, 2017. No class on November 22.

Location: 

Main Campus

Tuition: 

$205

This seminar focuses on the six poets (one recently rediscovered) who most defined  English Romanticism in poetry and verse drama between 1798 and 1824. It emphasizes their philosophical, emotional, and stylistic tugs-of-war, despite their quite different politics: first, between proposals for revolutions in social organization and how individuals relate to the wider world (they all knew the American and French revolutions of the 1770s-90s), and second, retrogressive longings for earlier orders of being and poetic styles whose revivals promised a better world than the emerging one of rapid social changes and aggressive industrialism. Each class examines their most progressive and simultaneously regressive tendencies, the special paradoxes that still make these poets so revealing about the post-Enlightenment dawning of the modern world. The six poets are: Wordsworth, Coleridge, Mary Robinson, Byron, Keats, and Shelley.

Required Reading: 

Robinson, Mary. Selected Poems. Ed. Judith Pascoe. Ontario, Canada: Broadview Press, 1999.  ISBN-10: 1551112019; ISBN-13: 978-1551112015.

 

The Longman Anthology of British Literature, Volume 2A: The Romantics and Their Contemporaries. Ed. David Damrosch et al. 5th ed. Pearson, 2011. ISBN-10: 0205223168; ISBN-13: 978-0205223169.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Meet Your Professor

Professor
Department of English

JERROLD E. HOGLE (Ph.D., Harvard University) is UA Distinguished Professor in English. Former President of the International Gothic Association and a Guggenheim, Mellon, and Huntington Library Fellow for research–and recent winner of the Distinguished Scholar Award from the Keats-Shelley Association of America–he has published widely on Romantic poetry and theater, literary and cultural theory, and the Gothic. In addition, he is the winner of many teaching awards.  

  • Ted and Shirley Taubeneck Superior Teaching Award

Location

Poetry Center
Dorothy Rubel Room
1508 E Helen
Tucson, AZ 85721
United States
Located on the SE corner of Helen Street and Vine Avenue, one block north of Speedway and three blocks west of Campbell Ave.

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