History of English Literature-I [PDF]

A Glossary of Literary Terms. • Patrick Murray. Literary Criticism: A glossary of major terms. • John Peck & Mar

0 downloads 3 Views 78KB Size

Recommend Stories


History of English Literature II
You can never cross the ocean unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore. Andrè Gide

history of the english language
You have to expect things of yourself before you can do them. Michael Jordan

History of English Literature I
Stop acting so small. You are the universe in ecstatic motion. Rumi

History of the English Language
If you feel beautiful, then you are. Even if you don't, you still are. Terri Guillemets

10th Paideia English & History
If you are irritated by every rub, how will your mirror be polished? Rumi

A History of the English Language
Sorrow prepares you for joy. It violently sweeps everything out of your house, so that new joy can find

History of Choi Lei Fut english
The beauty of a living thing is not the atoms that go into it, but the way those atoms are put together.

PDF English
Be who you needed when you were younger. Anonymous

PDF file: History of Microscopy
Every block of stone has a statue inside it and it is the task of the sculptor to discover it. Mich

A History of Anthropology [PDF]
half the population were slaves; free citizens regarded manual labour as degrading, and ..... private property, police and magistrates, until the free and good soul ...... Downloaded from: http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/highlights/culture_home. I

Idea Transcript


ENGLISH LITERATURE Paper : A Unit I:

Poetry/History of English Literature-I

-

Poetry Shakespeare:

-

Donne:

-

Milton: Blake:

-

Wordsworth: Coleridge: Shelley:

Max Marks 75

Since Brass, Nor Stone That Time of Year The Flea Go and Catch a Folling Star Lycidas The Clod and the Pebble The Human Abstract Lines Composed near Tintern Abbey Dejection: an Ode Ode on a Grecian Urn

Unit II:   

Introduction to Literary Genres Poetry-narrative (epic, bailad, romance), tyric (sonnet, ode, etegy) Drama-Comedy, Tragedy, Romance, Historical Play Novel-Picaresque, Epistolary, Stream of Consciousness

Unit III: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

History of English Literature (1500-1830) Elizabethan Drama Metaphysical Poetry Eighteenth Century Novel Eighteenth Century Prose Romantic Revival

For Unit II students can consult the following books:  MH Abrams A Glossary of Literary Terms  Patrick Murray Literary Criticism: A glossary of major terms  John Peck & Martin Coyle Literary Terms and Criticism  Jeffrey Wainwright Poetry: The Basics, Routledge (Foundation Books, New Delhi) For Unit III students can use any stander book on the history of English Literature including the following:  George Sampson: The Concise Cambridge History of English Literature

  

Ronald Carter & John Mc Rae: The Routledge History of Literature in English A Sanders: A History of English Literature (Oxford) Arthur Compton-Ricket: A History of English Literature

Examination Pattern In the examination there shall be five questions.  Q1 shall consist of 6 stanzas for reference to the context from Unit I, out of which candidates shall be required to attempt three. 3x5=15 marks  Q2 and Q3 shall be essay type questions with internal/parallel choices on the poems not covered in Q1. 2x15=30 marks  Q4 shall be based on Unit II and shall have internal choice. 10 marks  Q5 shall be based on Unit III and shall have three questions on short notes out of which candidates shall be required to attempt 2. 2x10=20 marks Paper : B Unit I Unit II Unit III

Novel-I Charles Dickens Charlotte Broote Thomas Hardy

Max Marks 75

Hard Times Jane Eyre Tess of the D’Urbevilles

Examination Pattern There shall be five questions in the paper. All questions shall carry equal wieghtage.  Q1 shall hav three parts, each part containing a short answer type question with an alternative from Units I-III in order to test close reading of the text by students.  Q2-Q4 shall be essay type questions with internal/parallel choice, one on Units I-III.  Q5 shall be general in nature. Candidates shall be required to write notes’ on 2 of the 3 given choices on the socio-historical background against which Dickens, Bronte and Hardy, respectively, were writing.

Smile Life

When life gives you a hundred reasons to cry, show life that you have a thousand reasons to smile

Get in touch

© Copyright 2015 - 2024 PDFFOX.COM - All rights reserved.