James Cook University Subject Handbook - 2012

EL3851 - Self, Science and Society in Eighteenth Century Literature

[Offered in even-numbered years]

Credit points: 03
Year: 2012
Student Contribution Band: Band 1
Administered by: School of Arts & Social Sciences

This subject focuses on English writing between 1660 and 1785, with an emphasis on the eighteenth century. It examines how social and political change and the rise of science impacted on culture and the individual. Key themes include Whig and Tory Party Politics; New Worlds - Microscopic and Cosmological; Debating Women; The Country and the City; A Day in Eighteenth-Century London; The Plurality of Worlds; Slavery and the Slave Trade in Britain; Plagues, Epidemics and Medicine. These themes are addressed by some of the greatest thinkers and writers in the English canon, in a variety of modes including romance, satire, epic, novel, diary, philosophical and scientific writing, and travel and journal writing.

Learning Outcomes

Graduate Qualities

Inadmissible
Subject
Combinations:
EL2851 AND EL3051 AND EL5051 AND EL5851

Availabilities

Townsville, Limited, Study Period 1
Census Date 22-Mar-2012
Face to face teaching (Students access online lecture material and attend a one hour per week face to face tutorial)
Coordinator: Assoc. Professor Stephen Torre
Lecturers: Assoc. Professor Stephen Torre, Professor Michael Ackland.
Contact hours:
  • 12 hours tutorials - Students access online lecture material and attend one hour face to face tutorial per week
    Assessment:end of semester exam (40%); tutorial attendance and participation (20%); essays (40%).

    Cairns, Internal, Study Period 1
    Census Date 22-Mar-2012
    Coord/Lect: Assoc. Professor Stephen Torre.
    Contact hours:
    • 26 hours lectures
    • 13 hours tutorials
      Assessment:end of semester exam (40%); tutorial attendance and participation (20%); essays (40%).

      External, Study Period 1
      Census Date 22-Mar-2012
      Coord/Lect: Assoc. Professor Stephen Torre.
      Contact hours:
      • 26 hours lectures - Two hours per week of reading online lectures
      • 13 hours tutorials - One hour per week for participation in and contribution to Discussion Board on LearnJCU
        Method of Delivery:WWW - LearnJCU
        Assessment:end of semester exam (40%); essays (40%); participation in and contribution to discussion board topics on learnjcu (20%).

        Note: Minor variations might occur due to the continuous Subject quality improvement process, and in case of minor variation(s) in assessment details, the Subject Outline represents the latest official information.