ESH6066
Time, Narrative, and Culture
Level 6 (30 credits)
This is a module that asks how an understanding of narrative can inform a wider concept of culture, and specifically how an understanding of the strange temporal structures and time-experiments of contemporary fiction reflect or produce changes in the modern experience of time. It focuses on examples of backwards narration, flashforward, transhistorical jumps and fuzzy temporality alongside a range of philosophical and social theories of time. Given that narratology is the systematic study of narrative, and that narrative is everywhere, the module also aims to assess the social and philosophical scope of narratological concepts.
Preparing for this Module and Approximate Costs
Why take Time, Narrative, and Culture
?
- Interesting range of time-experimental novels, including backwards narration and proleptic narration.
- Philosophical and Social Theories of time
- A range of narratological concepts to describe the temporal structures of narrative
Learning Context |
Long Seminar + Workshop (or equivalent) |
Semester |
One |
Assessment |
- Written Assignment (1500 words), 30%
- Written Assignment (3500 words), 70%
|
Mode of reassessment |
Standard |
Contact |
|
There is some content covered on the programme that you may find challenging and sensitive. We do not issue content notes for individual texts (written, performance, visual, sonic etc.), but please do contact your module tutor and/or convenor and/or adviser if you have concerns or problems relating any of the content, themes or discussions.