Search : Index : Faculty of Arts : English
Prev 106-042 Postcolonial Cultural Studies
Next 106-046 Romanticism/Primitivism/Nationalism

 106-043 The Victorian Supernatural

Note

Formerly available as 106-262/362. Students who have completed 106-262/362 are not eligible to enrol in this subject.

Credit Points

12.5

HECS Band

1

Coordinator

To be advised

Prerequisites

Usually 25 points of First Year English, see Prerequisites.

Semester

1 (view timetable)

Contact

A 1-hour lecture per week and nine 2-hour tutorials scheduled across the semester

Subject Description

This subject provides an introduction to the discourse of the supernatural in popular literary discourses of the Victorian period. Students will read well-known literary texts, ghost stories, sensation novels and science fiction in the context of Victorian anxieties about sexual transgression, madness, race, disease, and the death of god. The subject asks students to consider the ways in which contemporary theorisations of the body, gender, race and modes of cultural production can help us to understand the preoccupations of Victorians with ghosts, spiritual forces, seances, telepathy, parapsychology and life in other worlds. This subject enables students to appreciate the close relationship that existed in Victorian culture between literary discourse and the discourses of science, politics, medicine, philosophy, theology and sociology; and to produce a historically and theoretically informed account of an aspect of the role of the supernatural or science fiction in Victorian culture.

Assessment

Written work totalling 4000 words.

Prescribed Texts

  • M Braddon, Lady Audley's Secret.
  • W Collins, The Woman in White.
  • R Dalby, The Virago Book of Victorian Ghost Stories.
  • C Dickens, A Christmas Carol.
  • J M Falkner, The Lost Stradivarius.
  • H James, The Turn of the Screw.
  • S Le Fance, In a Glass Darkly.
  • R L Stevenson, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Stories.


Search : Index : Faculty of Arts : English
Prev 106-042 Postcolonial Cultural Studies
Next 106-046 Romanticism/Primitivism/Nationalism
Status:                   Official 2000
Last Modified:            Thursday November 25 15:09
SGML to HTML Conversion:  Information Technology Services
Authorised by:            Academic Registrar
Email Enquiries:          Course_Information@registrar.unimelb.edu.au