EN4369
Victorian Literature and Science
2019-2020
30
15
SCQF level 10
1
Academic year(s): 2019-2020
SCOTCAT credits : 30
ECTS credits : 15
Level : SCQF level 10
Semester: 1
Availability restrictions: Not automatically available to General Degree students
Planned timetable:
How is scientific knowledge transformed when it is deployed in literary writing? How do linguistic strategies such as metaphor shape the communication and reception of scientific theories and concepts? Can students of English analyse a passage of scientific writing in the same way as they would a literary text? This module sets out to answer these questions by exploring the diverse connections between literature and science in the Victorian period. The decades between 1830 and 1900 witnessed the development of the scientific disciplines in their modern forms, and the module will examine the role of literature in disseminating, questioning, and legitimising the intellectual authority of science in Victorian Britain. The module will trace the interactions between literature and science in Victorian poetry, the realist novel, and science fiction, and in the writing of scientists such as the physicist John Tyndall, the biologist Thomas Henry Huxley, and Charles Darwin. (Group C)
Pre-requisite(s): Before taking this module you must pass EN2003 and pass EN2004
Weekly contact: 2-hour seminars and 2 optional consultative hours.
Scheduled learning hours: 44
Guided independent study hours: 256
As used by St Andrews: Coursework = 100%
As defined by QAA
Written examinations : 0%
Practical examinations : 0%
Coursework: 100%
Re-assessment: 3-hour Written Examination = 100%
Module coordinator: Dr G P Tate
Module teaching staff: Dr Greg Tate (GPT4)
Module coordinator email gpt4@st-andrews.ac.uk