Bachelor
2024/2025
Comparative Aspects of the Study of Literature and Art
Type:
Elective course (Philology)
Area of studies:
Philology
Delivered by:
Department of Philology
When:
2 year, 3, 4 module
Mode of studies:
offline
Open to:
students of all HSE University campuses
Instructors:
Renata Goroshkova
Language:
English
ECTS credits:
4
Course Syllabus
Abstract
Comparative Aspects of the Study of Literature and Art brings together a series of reflections on the relationship and cross-fertilization of literature, visual arts, and music. The course introduces students to the basics of intermedial analysis and shows the heterogeneity, comparability, and interconnectedness of the arts at different levels: from forms and techniques to ideas and themes, from common ancient roots to adaptability of the arts to social and geopolitical discourses.
Learning Objectives
- The course enables students to explore the rich variety of interrelationships between literature and the arts, learn about contemporary approaches to ‘reading’ and interpreting of the arts across media, and enhance their intermedial literacy.
Expected Learning Outcomes
- Students analyzes individual works of art from an intermedial and/or comparative perspectives, applies the accumulated knowledge of the English short story in individual research and college classroom contexts.
- Students identify the transmedial features of film, opera, and other arts originating from and prototypal in literature.
- Students reveal and explain the (audio)visual (e.g. cinematic, pictorial, musical) dimensions of literary texts.
- Students engage in fluent written and oral professional interaction in English and build oral arguments in response to the intellectually challenging problems.
- Students participate in guided discussions of fiction, art, literary/art/music criticism, and theory of intermediality.
- Students embark on, complete, and present individual research mini-projects
- Students write articulate and clear short texts in comparative and intermedial study of literature and arts.
Course Contents
- Forms, devices, and techniques of literature and the arts
- The world of words and music
- Concepts that permeate literature and the arts
Assessment Elements
- ExamOn the scheduled examination date and at the appointed time, students log in to their Smart LMS accounts to write a 1 hour exam paper. The exam is a short 1.5 – 2-page essay (800-1500 words) on 1 of the 3-5 topics/questions given for the student’s choice. The exam is limited to 1 hour only from the moment the student opens the exam electronic form.
- ParticipationParticipation comprises students’ asking and answering questions and taking part in the discussion. Each class is devoted to a specific topic. Students prepare the assigned readings to conduct an in-class discussion of the sources and on the issues scheduled for the correspondent date. The course instructor coordinates the discussion and evaluates each student’s participation and contribution.
- PresentationIn the first week of the course, students sign up for presentations, which are based on their independent study of an artwork in the light of the relevant theoretical approaches and/or their independent research into the issue discussed in class.
- Quiz: In one or several lectures or seminars, students are given a test of 10 questions based on a literary works analyzed at lectures by the course instructor. The test is conducted at no advance notice. The exact number of tests and the questions they contain are kept secret. There can be no more than 10 tests conducted during the course. The test(s) cannot be retaken; if a student has missed a test, the result is marked 0 (zero). The mark for thiscourse requirement is the mean of the marks for all the tests offered throughout the course duration.
Interim Assessment
- 2024/2025 4th module0.3 * Exam + 0.14 * Participation + 0.14 * Presentation + 0.27 * Presentation + 0.15 * Quiz
Bibliography
Recommended Core Bibliography
- Damrosch, D. (2017). How to Read World Literature (Vol. Second edition). Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell. Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&db=edsebk&AN=1553409
- Pizer, J. (2000). Goethe’s “World Literature” Paradigm and Contemporary Cultural Globalization. Comparative Literature, 52(3), 213. https://doi.org/10.1215/-52-3-213
Recommended Additional Bibliography
- Wood, M., & Bermann, S. (2005). Nation, Language, and the Ethics of Translation. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. Retrieved from http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&site=eds-live&db=edsebk&AN=305805