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DEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2007/2008
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Home : College of Humanities and Social Science : School of Literatures, Languages and Cultures (Schedule G) : English Literature

Archived Version

The Degree Regulations and Programmes of Study has been formulated as a dynamic online publication in order to provide the most up to date information possible. Master versions of the Degree Regulations and Programmes of Study incorporating all changes to date are archived twice a year on 1 September and within the first three University working days prior to the start of Semester 2 in January. Please note that some of the data recorded about this course has been amended since the last master version was archived. That version should be consulted to determine the changes made.

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Stevenson and the End of the Nineteenth Century (P02707)

? Credit Points : 20  ? SCQF Level : 11  ? Acronym : LLC-P-P02707

This course looks in detail at the novels, prose and poetry of Robert Louis Stevenson, making connections with his work and the fiction and non-fiction of the last decades of the 19th century. We will look at subjects such as: children's fiction, gothic, adventure, anthropology, SCotland, the Pacific. We will compare Stevenson to writers such as: R. M. Ballantyne, Jack London, Henry James, J. G. Frazer.



Entry Requirements

? This course is not available to visting students.

Subject Areas

Delivery Information

? Normal year taken : Postgraduate

? Delivery Period : Not being delivered

? Contact Teaching Time : 2 hour(s) per week for 10 weeks

? Other Required Attendance : 1 hour(s) per week for 10 weeks

All of the following classes

Type Day Start End Area
Lecture Thursday 09:00 10:50 Central

Summary of Intended Learning Outcomes

By the end of this course, students will have developed:

* a famililarity with a broad range of Stevenson's writing in fiction and non-fiction.

* an understanding of various genres of fictional and non-fictional writing practised in the late nineteenth century.

* an ability to make critical and contextual comparisons between the writing of Stevenson and his contemporaries.

* an awareness of the literary, critical and cultural questions raised by these genres of writing.

Assessment Information

One 4,000 word essay to be submitted as specified in the programme handbook or by the supervisor

Contact and Further Information

The Course Secretary should be the first point of contact for all enquiries.

Course Secretary

Mrs Kate Marshall
Tel : (0131 6)50 4114
Email : Kate.Marshall@ed.ac.uk

Course Organiser

Dr Penny Fielding
Tel : (0131 6)50 3609
Email : Penny.Fielding@ed.ac.uk

School Website : http://www.llc.ed.ac.uk/

College Website : http://www.hss.ed.ac.uk/

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