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Course info
KAA / BBRL1
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Course description
Department/Unit / Abbreviation
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KAA
/
BBRL1
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Academic Year
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2024/2025
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Academic Year
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2024/2025
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Title
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British Literature I
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Form of course completion
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Course-credit
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Form of course completion
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Course-credit
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Accredited / Credits
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Yes,
4
Cred.
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Type of completion
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Combined
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Type of completion
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Combined
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Time requirements
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Lecture
1
[HRS/WEEK]
Seminar
2
[HRS/WEEK]
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Course credit prior to examination
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No
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Course credit prior to examination
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No
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Automatic acceptance of credit before examination
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No
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Included in study average
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NO
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Language of instruction
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English
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Occ/max
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Automatic acceptance of credit before examination
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No
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Summer semester
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0 / 85
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0 / 0
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0 / 0
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Included in study average
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NO
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Winter semester
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0 / -
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0 / -
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0 / -
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Repeated registration
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NO
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Repeated registration
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NO
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Timetable
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Yes
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Semester taught
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Summer semester
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Semester taught
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Summer semester
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Minimum (B + C) students
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not determined
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Optional course |
Yes
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Optional course
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Yes
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Language of instruction
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English
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Internship duration
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0
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No. of hours of on-premise lessons |
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Evaluation scale |
S|N |
Periodicity |
každý rok
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Periodicita upřesnění |
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Fundamental theoretical course |
Yes
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Fundamental course |
No
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Fundamental theoretical course |
Yes
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Evaluation scale |
S|N |
Substituted course
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KAA/BRLI1
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Preclusive courses
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N/A
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Prerequisite courses
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N/A
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Informally recommended courses
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N/A
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Courses depending on this Course
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KAA/BAML, KAA/BBRL2
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Histogram of students' grades over the years:
Graphic PNG
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XLS
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Course objectives:
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The aim of the course is to introduce students to classic works, authors and periods of British literature from its beginnings until the 18th century (following periods under focus in BBRL2/EBRL2). Lectures provide a chronological overview of individual phases of literary development, their specific features and overlap. Seminars complement the lectures and stress reading of representative materials, their analysis and interpretation in the context of not only British literature, but also cultural and socio-political events.
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Requirements on student
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- Attendance (3 missed classes max.)
- Active participation preparation for seminars
- Cooperation in a team presentation
- detailed knowledge of all texts assigned for the seminars
- Final written test (ability to discuss 3 assigned primary texts [see below] + knowledge based on lectures, seminars and relevant parts of Paul Poplawski: English Literature in Context - see below)
in case of remote learning
- lectures and seminars are online in real time respecting the schedule through MS Teams.
- materials for seminars available in Moodle (except for book-length texts)
- active participation in seminars
- participation in team presentation
- detailed knowledge of all texts assigned for each seminar
- final written test (ability to discuss 3 assigned primary texts [see below] + knowledge based on lectures, seminars and relevant parts of Paul Poplawski: English Literature in Context - see below)
primary texts:
1/ The Seafarer
2/ Chaucer: selection from Canterbury Tales - General Prologue, Knight's Tale, Wife of Bath's Tale.
3/ Wordsworth: Michael
Relevant parts of Poplawski (pagination = 2017 edition):
1/ Medieval English - Literary Overview 30-45, Readings 64-85,
2/ The Renaissance - Literary Overview 129-150, Readings 161-182,
3/ The Restoration and 18th century - Literary overview 218-236, Readings 251-268,
4/ The Romantic Period - Literary Overview 293-312, Readings 333-351.
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Content
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Old English Literature: Folklore, heroic epic, elegies. Texts: riddles, Beowulf.
Early Medieval Poetry and Prose. Texts: Arthurian legends (selection).
Late Medieval Poetry and Prose. Text: G. Chaucer: Canterbury Tales (selection).
Early Renaissance Poetry and Prose. Texts: T. More, T. Wyatt, H. Howard (selection).
Elizabethan Poetry and Prose. Texts: P. Sidney, W. Shakespeare, Sir W. Raleigh (selection).
Drama until 1600. Text: W. Shakespeare: Othello.
Poetry and Prose 1600 - 1660. Texts: F. Bacon, B. Jonson, J. Donne, G. Herbert, R. Herrick, J. Milton (selection).
Restoration and Classicism. Texts: J. Dryden, A. Pope, S. Johnson (selection).
Beginnings of the Novel. J. Addison, R. Steele, J. Swift, H. Fielding. Text: D. Defoe: Moll Flanders.
Sentimentalism and Pre-Romanticism. Texts: S. Richardson, E. Young, T. Gray, W. Blake (selection).
Romanticism: Texts: W. Wordsworth, S.T. Coleridge (selection).
Gothic Novel: H. Walpole, Ann Radcliffe, Text: M. Shelley: Frankenstein.
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Activities
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Fields of study
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Guarantors and lecturers
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Literature
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Basic:
POPLAWSKI, Paul. English Literature in Context. Cambridge: CUP, 2008. ISBN 9780521549288.
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Basic:
GREENBLATT, Stephen. The Norton Anthology of English Literature, Volume. II.. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2012.
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Basic:
DRABBLE, Margaret, ed. The Oxford companion to English literature. 6th ed.. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000.
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Recommended:
FORD, Boris. New Pelican guide to English literature: The Age of Shakespeare. London: Penguin Books, 1982.
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Recommended:
STEVENS, David. Romanticicsm. Cambridge: CUP, 2004.
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Recommended:
Sanders, Andrew. The short Oxford history of English literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-19-926338-8.
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Time requirements
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All forms of study
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Activities
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Time requirements for activity [h]
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Účast na výuce
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39
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Příprava na zápočet
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20
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Příprava prezentace (referátu) v cizím jazyce
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3
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Domácí příprava na výuku
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55
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Total
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117
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Prerequisites - other information about course preconditions |
- |
Competences acquired |
Students will acquire textual and analytical literary competence in literary areas. In terms of learning competences, they will acquire an overview of the historical development of British literature, main authors and works, together with their contextualization within the period of their making. Regular guided analyses of seminary texts establish the ability to work with literary works independently and critically. |
Teaching methods |
- Monologic (reading, lecture, briefing)
- Dialogic (discussion, interview, brainstorming)
- Work with text (with textbook, with book)
- Stimulating activities (simulation, games, drama)
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Assessment methods |
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