This course explores the dialogue and interrelation between contained spaces ("home") and spaces on the outside ("world"), beginning first with domestic spaces, and then moving outward to such realms and concepts as "community," "nation," "national language(s)," "race," and "other worlds," quite literally. Primary readings: ballads ("Lady and the Blackamoor" and "Good Fellows Frolick"); the anonymous Arden of Faversham; Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor; Deloney's Jack of Newbury; Jonson's Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue and its sequel, For the Honor of Wales; Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveller; Marlowe's Jew of Malta together with Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice; "Miles Philips put on shore in the West Indies" together with Raleigh's "Discovery of Guiana"; and Shakespeare's The Tempest. |
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Instructor
Patricia Fumerton Office and Office Hours
SH 2506
By arrangement. Please E-mail.
Location/Time
South Hall 2510
TR, 12:00 PM1:15 PM
Required Texts
Two Readers available from UCSB Bookstore: one is a duplicate of an Arden of Faversham edition; the other is a compilation of articles, chapters from books, and some primary readings.
William Shakespeare, The Merry Wives of Windsor (Penguin-Pelican edition)
William Shakespeare, The Merchant of Venice (Signet Classics)
William Shakespeare, The Tempest (Signet Classics)
Christopher Marlowe, The Jew of Malta (New Mermaid)
An Anthology of Elizabethan Prose Fiction, ed. Paul Salzman (Oxford World Classics): contains Thomas Deloney's Jack of Newbury and Thomas Nashe's The Unfortunate Traveller
Recommended Texts
Assignments (more)
10% Regular Attendance and Participation
30% Paper #2
(4-6 pages)
15% Oral Report #1
(5-7 minutes)
15% Oral Report #2
(5-7 minutes)
15% Participation in a Debate
(4 minutes)
15% Paper #1
(2-3 pages)
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