Video lectures on english literature free download






















Dryden, Pope, Swift, Johnson, and Blake; the poetic genres; the rise of journalism and the novel; biography and drama; historical and philosophical background. The Contemporary Novel: Magical Realism. This course will focus on recent novels that have been described by the term "magical realism. Masterpieces of British Literature from the Eighteenth Century. Works by major British authors representative of the romantic, Victorian, and modern periods.

Masterpieces of British Literature to the Eighteenth Century. Works by major British authors representative of medieval, Renaissance, and neoclassical periods. Nobel Prize Winners in Literature. Examination of selected works by winners of the Nobel Prize in literature in prose, poetry, and drama, focusing on literary techniques and the cultural background and signific.

Development of the Novel. Comparison of novels representing various periods in Western cultures with emphasis on a broad historical perspective on the genre, as well as its special characteristics. Communications Studies - Journalistic Ethics. German 59 - Holocaust in Film and Literature. Critical Analysis and Literary Readings. Medieval English.

Approaching Shakespeare. Literature, Art and Oxford. Contemporary Literature. History of Art Radio Hour with Le Transitioning to a Sustainable Fu Why are women experts missing fro History of Art Radio Hour with An The Politics of Water Scarcity in COVID and disproportionality and Factory farms are breeding ground History of Art Radio Hour with Me Artivism and conservation with So Meet the Manuscripts: Uncomfortab Episode 4: Academic, Moral, and S Roundtable: The Environment and t Professor Alexandra Harris discusses Shakespeare's sonnet 23, communication in lockdown, body language and masks with Professor Kate McLoughlin.

Professors Alexandra Harris and Kate McLoughlin discuss Virginia Woolf's Between the Acts, how the lockdown makes us feel self-conscious and what it feels like to live in momentous historical times.

Lawrence's poem 'Silence' and discuss the beauty and terror of silence, sex and death wishes. This episode explores what we lose or gain when we read a translated book. Are we missing something by reading the English translation and not the original language version? And what can the translation process tell us about how languages work?

Held on 20th November Chaired, Thomas Cousins. Book at Lunchtime is a series of bite-sized book discussions held fortnightly during term-time, with commentators from a range of disciplines. Introduced by Catriona Seth. How do historical objects illuminate the real-world sources of her ideas? Creative Commons. Emma Smith interviews Claire McGowan. Memories, genre fiction and writing under a different pen name are all on the agenda for this podcast with Northern Irish crime author Claire McGowan and her alter ego Eva Woods.

Emma Smith , Claire McGowan. Emma Smith interviews Anya Glazer. Emma Smith , Anya Glazer. Emma Smith interviews James Hawes. Emma Smith , James Hawes. Body of evidence. Ana Paula Cordeiro , Merve Emre. Final Roundtable: Into the Hills. Diane Purkiss, University of Oxford, chairs the final roundtable discussion of the conference.

Diane Purkiss. Is there such a thing as an authentic myth? Folklore in heritage interpretation at prehistoric places. Susan Greaney.

Tangible and intangible heritage: exploring magic, folklore, and the supernatural in the places, spaces and collections of the National Trust. Sally Anne Huxtable. Kate Armstrong , Hannah Keddie. Teaching the Folklore of British Landscapes. Owen Davies Hertfordshire , gives the second presentation in the fifth panel of the conference, Teaching and Learning, chaired by Oliver Cox.

Owen Davies. Mary Bateman English Heritage , gives the first talk in the fifth panel of the conference, Teaching and Learning, chaired by Oliver Cox. Mary Bateman. Supernatural defences activated through death. Brian Hoggard. Remembering Irish witches. Andrew Sneddon. Jenny Butler. Mysterious Wales: between romanticism and tourism. Juliette Wood. Well, what about witches and wizards?

Lisa Tallis. Magic and Medicine in Early Roman Britain. Nicky Garland Durham , gives the first talk in the second panel, Tales in Place: Change and Continuity, in the conference. Nicky Garland. Panel 1 - Who Owns this Place? Pondering Identities Questions. Questions and answers from the first panel of the seminar. Alice Purkiss.

The Byland Abbey ghost stories: using the dead to bring a medieval monastery to life.



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