Code: | LLC124 | Acronym: | LNAC |
Keywords | |
---|---|
Classification | Keyword |
OFICIAL | American Literature |
Active? | Yes |
Responsible unit: | Department of Anglo-American Studies |
Course/CS Responsible: | Bachelor in Languages, Literatures and Cultures |
Acronym | No. of Students | Study Plan | Curricular Years | Credits UCN | Credits ECTS | Contact hours | Total Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LLC | 65 | LLC - Monodisciplinary Study Plan | 1 | - | 6 | 52 | 162 |
2 | |||||||
3 | |||||||
LLC - Bidisciplinar Study Plan (Portuguese Studies) | 3 | - | 6 | 52 | 162 | ||
LLC - Bidisciplinar Study Plan (Two Foreign Languages) | 3 | - | 6 | 52 | 162 |
This programme is designed to engage students in the analysis of novels representing the profound changes in sensibility which World War II led to in American letters. Drawing on a variety of critical, theoretical, historical, and cultural sources, this subject also concerns the contextualisation and study of the most distinguished moments in American narrative fiction, from the impact of World War II to postmodernist writing and multicultural sensibility. The programme structure shall naturally lead to a critical understanding of the main tendencies in the American novel of the 21st century.
At the end of the course, students shoud be able to:
a) Gain a deep knowledge of the main trends in Post-World War II American writing;
b) Develop the ability to read some of the Contemporary American fiction in relation to its historical and cultural contexts;
c) Deepen the knowledge of the various manifestations of postmodernist writing and of multiculturalism;
d) Become aware of the diversity of the American Novel in the 21st century.
Throughout the semester, this course will focus on relevant themes and trends of Contemporary American Literature: anxiety and identity crisis in the 1940's and 1950's; the affluent society and its paradoxes; conformism and counterculture; the travel narrative; African-American fiction and women's writing; postmodernity and postmodernism; the explosion of a hypermediatized society in the U.S.A.; patterns of quest in the American novel of the 21st century.
Lectures, seminars (critical discussion of texts), and tutorials. Student participation is fundamental.
Designation | Weight (%) |
---|---|
Exame | 100,00 |
Total: | 100,00 |
Designation | Time (hours) |
---|---|
Estudo autónomo | 104,00 |
Frequência das aulas | 58,00 |
Total: | 162,00 |
Students must attend 75% of all classes.
b) A written exam - 100%
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable