RLFR 308 Origins and Originalities: Literary Masterpieces of the Renaissance (Same as Literary Studies 302) (Not offered 1997-98; to be offered 1999-2000)
The literary culture of the sixteenth century was shaped by two intersecting
ideas: first, that books have the power to refashion an absent past and make
it seem less remote; second, that through this process of renewal, writers
create liberating structures, works which set themselves apart radically
from their own sources. This tendency to look back and look forward
simultaneously-to renovate and innovate-is the defining mode of Renaissance
literary discourse. The result is an age richly exciting in the way it
articulates its view of the world. The course will trace the main features
of this double vision in selected readings from six major authors: Erasmus,
Machiavelli, Castiglione, Rabelais, Montaigne, and Shakespeare. Among the
areas to be examined will be the shift from oral to printed culture, concepts
of language, genre, and rhetoric, historical and socio-political forces,
education, the visual arts, and humanism.
Lecture and discussion. All readings in English; conducted in English.
Requirements: class participation, a midterm, and a final paper.
NORTON