FR233-15 Bestsellers of the 19th Century
Introductory description
This module aims to examine texts by four of France's greatest writers. The nineteenth century was the heyday of the novel and writers tried to convey the whole of society in their works. We will take Chateaubriand's Rene, George Sand's Indiana, Gustave Flaubert's world classic Madame Bovary, and Emile Zola's La Bête humaine, and examine them not just as literary texts but also as social documents. We will consider the impact of the Revolution, the Restoration of the monarchy and the Second Empire, the themes of Paris versus the provinces, the position of women, and class conflict. We will be able to explore the changes in French society that took place from the time of Napoleon Bonaparte to the early years of the Third Republic. The changes will be charted alongside literary developments from Romanticism to Naturalism in order to answers the following questions: what makes a bestseller? and what is a writer's relationship with the society in which he or she lives?
Module aims
The aim of this module is to examine four of the best-known novels of four of France's greatest novelists not just as literary texts but also as social documents. A socio-political exploration of the changes in France from the Empire to the Third Republic will take place alongside an examination of the literary developments from Romanticism to Naturalism. In terms of achievement of the aims of the degree courses on which is it available, the module will encourage progression by imposing appropriately increasing demands in terms of knowledge and skills, students' capacity for conceptualisation and their autonomy in learning and will therefore represent an appropriate stepping up from the first-year core literature module.
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Week 1: Chateaubriand, Rene
The Revolution, Rene and Romanticism 1789-1830
Weeks 2 - 3: George Sand, Indiana
Post-revolutionary society and the Restoration
Romanticism
The position of women
Weeks 4 -7 : Flaubert, Madame Bovary
Paris v the provinces
Realism
Nineteenth-Century morals
Weeks 8 - 10: Zola, La Bête humaine
The Second Empire
Naturalism
Class conflict
Week 21: Conceptual overview
The Writer and Society
What makes a best seller?
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Demonstrate a refined knowledge of language varieties, register, genre, nuances of meaning and language use.
- Demonstrate an ability, willingness and openness to engage with French nineteenth-century culture, appreciating its distinctive features.
- Demonstrate an ability to access, read and critically analyse primary and secondary source materials in French.
- Demonstrate knowledge of aspects of French cultures, communities and societies.
- Demonstrate familiarity with the methodologies and approaches appropriate to the discipline.
Indicative reading list
Baguley, David, Napoleon III and his Régime: An Extravaganza (2000)
Brombert, Victor, The Novels of Flaubert: A Study of Themes and Techniques (1966)
Cooper, Barbara T. and Mary Donaldson-Evans, (eds.) Moving Forward, Holding Fast: The Dynamics of Nineteenth-Century French Culture (1997)
Godwin-Jones, R., Romantic Vision: The Novels of George Sand (1995)
Haavik, Kristof Haakon, In Mortal Combat : The Conflict of Life and Death in Zola's Rougon-Macquart (2000)
Heath, Stephen, Gustave Flaubert: Madame Bovary (1992)
Hiddleston, Janet, Indiana, Mauprat (2000)
Magraw, Roger, France 1815-1914 :The Bourgeois Century (1983)
Mitterand, Henri, Zola et le naturalisme (1986)
Pasco, Allan H., Novel Configurations : A Study of French Fiction : Stendhal, Balzac, Zola (1987)
Schor, Naomi, George Sand and Idealism (1993)
View reading list on Talis Aspire
International
All modules delivered in SMLC are necessarily international. Students engage with themes and ideas from a culture other than that of the UK and employ their linguistic skills in the analysis of primary materials from a non-Anglophone context. Students will also be encouraged to draw on the experiences of visiting exchange students in the classroom and will frequently engage with theoretical and critical frameworks from across the world.
Subject specific skills
This module will develop students’ linguistic skills through engaging with primary materials in the target language. It will build students’ capacity to engage with aspects of French culture through analysis of this primary material and through seminar discussion aimed at deeper critical thinking. In particular, students’ awareness of modern French language will be enhanced through lectures and seminars which engage in scholarship in the field.
Transferable skills
All SMLC language modules demand critical and analytical engagement with linguistic and cultural products from target-language cultures. In the course of independent study, class work and assessment students will develop skills in the following: written and oral communication in the target language and in English, intercultural understanding and the ability to mediate between languages and cultures, independent research skills in the target language(s) and in English, problem solving and analysis, creative and critical thinking, time management and organisation, ICT literacy in both English and the target language(s), personal responsibility and the exercise of initiative.
Study time
Type | Required |
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Lectures | 11 sessions of 1 hour (4%) |
Seminars | 11 sessions of 1 hour (4%) |
Private study | 128 hours (51%) |
Assessment | 100 hours (40%) |
Total | 250 hours |
Private study description
Students are expected to read the set texts and a selection of secondary sources, to prepare for the seminars and to complete the assessments.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You do not need to pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Students can register for this module without taking any assessment.
Assessment group A3
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
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Assessment component |
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Essay | 80% | 80 hours | Yes (extension) |
1 essay (2750-3000) chosen from titles offered or designed in consultation with tutor. This should be a comparative essay on two of the set texts |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Video presentation | 20% | 20 hours | Yes (extension) |
Video presentation on one of the set texts, excluding the two selected for the summative essay. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
Feedback on assessment
standard SMLC feedback on preparation throughout the module and formal feedback through SMLC feedback sheet
Pre-requisites
To take this module, you must have passed:
Courses
This module is Option list B for:
- Year 2 of UHAA-V3R1 Undergraduate History of Art and French
- Year 2 of UPOA-M163 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and French