sábado, 8 de enero de 2022

5. Literatura norteamericana del siglo XIX

Con esta unidad 5 terminamos las clases presenciales, y el curso. Recordad que también tenéis disponibles los materiales en red de las unidades 6-7-8.

_____________

Ya tenemos FECHA DE EXAMEN de la primera convocatoria:

Introducción a la literatura inglesa, examen 3 Feb. 2022, 10-13h, aula 1 edificio central de Filosofía y Letras.

Recordad que el examen teórico tiene una sección de preguntas de tipo test, y además un tema a elegir entre dos (siendo uno de los temas uno de los principales autores del programa, y otro una época o género, donde puedan entrar varios autores)

Y la segunda parte, el examen práctico, que también tiene que hacer todo el mundo, es un texto para traducir al español o comentar en inglés. Sin diccionarios, etc. (—se da por hecho que habrá palabras que falten—no matter). Se valoran la precisión, la capacidad de comprensión, y el conocimiento de la materia y del idioma inglés.

 

 

 

_________________

Feliz año nuevo. El 10 y 11 de enero haremos una introducción somera a los principales autores norteamericanos de mediados y finales del XIX, empezando por Melville, Dickinson y Whitman, y siguiendo por Mark Twain, Stephen Crane y Henry James.

 

 ________________________

 

 

 

5. LITERATURA NORTEAMERICANA DEL SIGLO XIX

Nuestro último tema presencial (sección A), y que enlaza con el primero de la sección B: Literatura inglesa y norteamericana 1900-1960



Os comunico que está abierto el periodo para hacer las encuestas sobre esta asignatura, y sobre las demás, en https://janovas.unizar.es/atenea/ate100bienvenida.xhtml


Iremos acabando el curso con unos pocos autores norteamericanos:  Whitman,  Mark Twain,  Henry James...  De todos los demás autores del siglo XIX voy dejando apuntes por la web, pero en su defecto acudid a los manuales para tener al menos una noción general de su figura y estilo.  Recordad que la literatura del siglo XX (SECCIÓN B) no entrará para tema, pero sí para preguntas cortas y opcionalmente para comprensión de texto.







HENRY JAMES         (1843-1916)


 Henry James, US/British novelist and essayist; b. New York, son of Henry James, Sr.; brother of William and Alice James; irregular international education, st. law at Harvard; writer for US periodicals, friend of W. D. Howells; l. Britain 1875-, 1st London, 1898 moved to Rye; unmarried, repressed homosexual, no sentimental attachments, inveterate socialite; author of psychological novels, theorist of narrative point of view and the art of fiction.

_____. Roderick Hudson. Novel. 1876.
_____. The American. Novel. 1877.
_____.  The Europeans: A Sketch. 1878.
_____. Daisy Miller. Novella. 1879.
_____. The Portrait of a Lady. Novel. 1881.
_____. Washington Square. Novel. 1881.
_____. The Aspern Papers. Novel. Atlantic (March-May 1888).
_____. The Bostonians. 1886.
_____. The Princess Cassamassima.Novel. 1886. _____. "The Real Thing." Story.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/2715/pg2715.html
_____. "The Middle Years." Story. 1893.
_____. Guy Domville. Play. 1895.
_____. "The Figure in the Carpet." Story.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/645
_____. The Spoils of Poynton. Novel. 1897.
_____. What Maisie Knew. Novel. 1897.
_____. The Turn of the Screw. Novel. Collier's (January-April 1898).
_____. The Awkward Age. Novel. 1899.
_____. The Wings of the Dove. Novel. 1902.
_____. The Ambassadors. Novel. 1903.
_____. The Golden Bowl. Novel. 1904.
_____. "The Jolly Corner." Story. In James, The Ghostly Tales.
_____. Notes on Novelists. 1914.
_____. A Small Boy and Others. Memoir.
_____. The Middle Years. Memoir. Online at Project Gutenberg.*
    http://www.gutenberg.org/files/32649/32649-h/32649-h.htm
_____. The Art of the Novel: Critical Essays. 1934.





Richard Gray, a chapter on American 19th-c. realism and Henry James: Capturing the Real Thing.


_______________________



- Henry James: NIVEL AVANZADO

- Una película de James Ivory sobre una novela de Henry James: The Bostonians (con subtítulos en español).




_______________________



 STEPHEN CRANE    (1871-1900)

US journalist and man of letters, b. New Jersey, youth in upstate New York, st. Lafayette College and Syracuse U, no degree, reporter in NY City for the Herald and Tribune; sucess with Red Badge, war reporter in Cuba and shipwreck; back to NY, common-law wife Cora, bohemian atmosphere, notorious;
reporter in the Greco-Turkish war with Cora, travelled to England,  decreased power as writer, d. of tuberculosis while on cure in Germany.


_____. Maggie: A Girl of the Streets.  Novel. 1893.
_____. The Red Badge of Courage: An Episode of the American Civil War. Novel. 1895.
_____. The Black Riders and Other Lines. Poems.  1895.
_____. The Little Regiment and Other Stories of the American Civil War. Stories. 1896.
_____. George's Mother. Novel. 1896.
_____. The Open Boat, and Other Tales of Adventure. 1898.
_____. "The Monster" and Other Stories. 1899.
_____. War is Kind. Poems. 1899.
_____. Whilomville Stories. 1900.
_____. Wounds in the Rain. Stories and sketches. 1900.




Notes on Stephen Crane from The Oxford Companion to American Literature. 

Stephen Crane. In The Literature Network
   
http://www.online-literature.com/crane/

_____. The Red Badge of Courage. Online at Project Gutenberg.
   
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/73/73-h/73-h.htm


A poem from Stephen Crane's The Black Riders (1895):



I STOOD UPON A HIGH PLACE,

AND SAW, BELOW, MANY DEVILS

RUNNING, LEAPING,

AND CAROUSING IN SIN.

ONE LOOKED UP, GRINNING,

AND SAID: "COMRADE! BROTHER!"







___________________________


Late 19th-c. American Literature


___________________________





MARK TWAIN         (1835-1910)

_____. The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County and Other Sketches. 1867.
_____. The Innocents Abroad. Satirical travel narrative. 1869.
_____. Roughing It. Frontier sketches. 1872.
_____. The Gilded Age. Novel. 1873. (With C. D. Warner).

_____. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Children's novel. 1876.
_____. A Tramp Abroad. 1880.
_____. The Prince and the Pauper. Historical novel. 1882.
_____. Life on the Mississippi. 1883.
_____. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Novel. 1884.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/76/76-h/76-h.htm

_____. A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court. Fantasy novel. 1889.
_____. The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson. Detective story. 1894.
_____. Following the Equator. Travel sketches. 1897.
_____. What Is Man? Philosophical dialogue. 1906.
_____. The Mysterious Stranger. 1916.
_____. Letters from the Earth. Ed. Bernard De Voto. 1963. (Satan as foreign visitor).
_____. Autobiography. Uncensored ed. Pub. 2010, 2013.
    http://www.marktwainproject.org/landing_writings.shtml
    2013




Mark Twain, pseudonym of Samuel Langhorne Clemens, US novelist, journalist and humourist; b. Florida, Missouri; childhood in Hannibal; l. Philadelphia, St. Louis, Hartford, etc.; printer and popular writer, affluent; friend of  William Dean Howells; bankrupt 1894 though bad printing investments; travelled round the world as successful lecturer; frontier humorist, evolves from American optimism to disillusioned pessimism, critic of imperialism and religious beliefs, d. Hartford, CT.

Hart and Leininger. "Mark Twain." (From the Oxford Companion to American Literature):
    http://vanityfea.blogspot.com.es/2012/12/mark-twain.html

La autobiografía de Mark Twain, obra póstuma recientemente publicada, en el sitio del Mark Twain. Una presentación: El blog de Mark Twain.

Y pensamientos anticristianos de Mark Twain sobre Dios y la religión.


Un texto en red de The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn





_____________________________


NIVEL AVANZADO

A lecture on The Wit and Wisdom of Mark Twain

_____________________

 

 

 

Una canción de la Guerra Civil norteamericana: The Battle Hymn of the Republic, de Julia Ward Howe:


  

 

Un documental sobre EMILY DICKINSON

 

 



EMILY DICKINSON    (1830-1886)



Emily Dickinson, US poet, spinster, recluse. Daughter of Edward Dickinson, lawyer in Amherst, MA; st. Amherst Academy, and Mount Holyoke Female Seminary; skeptic and unworldly disposition; l. secluded at home from 1862, intense friendships and epistolary relationships with Benjamin F. Newton, Rev. Charles Wadsworth, T. W. Higginson and others; did not publish in her lifetime, wrote for herself experimenting with the expression of complex everyday feelings and metaphysical symbolism.

_____.  "After Great Pain, a Formal Feeling Comes." Poem.
_____. "Because I Could Not Stop for Death."
_____. "There's been a Death, in the Opposite House."
_____. "The Soul Selects Her Own Society."
_____. "There is no Frigate like a Book."
_____. "I felt a Funeral, in my Brain."
_____. "I started Early—Took my Dog."
_____. "Much Madness is Divinest Sense."
_____. "A Light exists in Spring."
_____. Poems by Emily Dickinson.  1890-96, etc. (1955).



Una conferencia de Laura Freixas: Emily Dickinson:una genia con habitación propia.











________________________________

NIVEL AVANZADO

- EMILY DICKINSON (NIVEL AVANZADO)

- SOME AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS


- Un audio histórico sobre LA GUERRA DE SECESIÓN AMERICANA (nivel avanzado)

_______________________________

 

WALT WHITMAN   (1819-1892)

Walt Whitman, US poet, influenced by Transcendentalism, writer of celebratory pantheistic free verse; egotistic democrat, patriot and homosexual.

  _____. "Song of Myself." In Whitman, Leaves of Grass. 1855.
_____. Leaves of Grass. 1855-1892.
_____. "Song of the Broad-Axe." Poem from Leaves of Grass.
_____. "Starting from Paumanok." 
Poem from Leaves of Grass.

_____. "Once I Passed through a Populous City." Poem from Leaves of Grass.

_____. "O Captain! My Captain!" Elegy on Lincoln. From Drum Taps & sequel 1867.
_____. "Pioneers! O Pioneeers." From Leaves of Grass.
_____. Democratic Vistas. Prose.  1871. (American literature; Transcendentalism; Politics; Commerce; Nature; Nature of literature)
_____. Memoranda during the War. Prose. 1875.
_____. "Whoever You Are Holding Me Now in Hand." Poem.
From  Leaves of Grass.

_____. "Years of the Modern." Poem. From  Leaves of Grass.
   




Notes on WALT WHITMAN: http://vanityfea.blogspot.com.es/2012/12/walt-whitman.html

__________


Walt Whitman: NIVEL AVANZADO

__________





HERMAN MELVILLE         (1819-1891)

Herman Melville, US novelist, b. New York, sailor in the Atlantic and the Pacific 1839-44, l. Boston, schoolteacher and customs officer, friend of Nathaniel Hawthorne, traveled to Holy Land, commercially unsuccessful after early best-sellers, frustrated man of letters, neglected in the late 19th, rediscovered in the 20th c.

_____. Typee. Novel. 1846.
_____. Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas. Novel. 1847.
_____. Redburn: His First Voyage. Novel. 1848.
_____. Mardi: And a Voyage Thither. Novel. 1849.
_____. White-Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War. Novel. 1850.
_____. Moby-Dick: or, The Whale. Novel. 1851.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2701
_____. Pierre, or the Ambiguities. Novel. 1852.
_____. "Benito Cereno." Story. In Melville, The Piazza Tales. 1856.
_____. "Bartleby the Scrivener." Story. In The Piazza Tales. 1856.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/11231/pg11231.html
_____. The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade. Satirical narrative. 1857.
_____. Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage to the Holy Land. Long poem. 1876.
_____. Billy Budd, Sailor. Novel. Posth. 1924.






Some notes on HermanMelville and his works.

Herman Melville on Wikipedia

Moby Dick, or, The Whale. Online at Project Gutenberg.*
    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2701

White whales are rare. But they do exist.







_________

Hawthorne and Melville, from Richard Gray's History of American literature.


_________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Martes 21 de diciembre: pasaremos rápidamente por encima de cuatro autores: Poe, Emerson & Thoreau, apenas mencionados, y Hawthorne.

En la única semana de enero, veremos los autores norteamericanos de mediados del siglo XIX. Durante las vacaciones se completarán en la web los temas de los autores por si acaso no nos da tiempo a verlos en clase.

Los temas de la sección B (literatura del siglo XX, no presencial) ya están también disponibles al completo en la columna de la derecha.





 

NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE     (1804-1864)

Nathaniel Hawthorne, New England romance and short story writer, b. Salem, of an old Puritan family—orig. Hathorne, wife Sophia, 3 children, customs officer, and diplomat in England; Transcendentalist affinities, friend of Melville and Emerson; d. Plymouth.

_____.  Fanshawe: A Tale. 1828.
_____. "Young Goodman Brown." Story. 1835
_____. "The Minister's Black Veil." Story. 1837.
_____. "Wakefield." Story. 1837.
_____. "Endicott and the Red Cross." Story. 1837.
_____. Twice-Told Tales. 1837, enlarged 1842.
_____. "
Rappacini's Daughter."
Story. In Mosses from an Old Manse.
_____. "Roger Malvin's Burial."
Story. In Mosses from an Old Manse.
_____. Mosses from an Old Manse. Stories. 1846.
_____. The Scarlet Letter. Romance. 1850.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/33/pg33.html
_____. "Ethan Brand." Story. 1851.
_____. The House of the Seven Gables. Romance. 1851.
_____. The Blithedale Romance. 1852.
_____. A Wonder Book. Children's stories. 1852.

_____. Tanglewood Tales. Children's stories. 1853.
_____. The Marble Faun, or the Romance of Monte Beni. 1860.
_____. Our Old Home. Essays on England. 1853.
_____. Dr. Grimshawe's Secret. Romance. 1882.







Some notes on Hawthorne





________

The Scarlet Letter. Una película de 1934 sobre la novela de Hawthorne.



 

_____________

NIVEL AVANZADO:

Una lección sobre The Scarlet Letter de Hawthorne—de la Universidad de Houston.
_____________
 

_______________

Two narratives on slavery:

Harriet Beecher Stowe. Uncle Tom's Cabin. Novel. 1852.

Douglass, Frederick. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, Written by Himself. 1845.

"Frederick Douglass." Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.*

         http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Douglass

         2014

_______________

 

 




HENRY DAVID THOREAU        (1817-1862)

US writer, naturalist, Transcendentalist-anarchist-primitivist-pacifist; b. Concord, MA; grad. Harvard 1817, influenced by E. T. Channing, Jones Very and Bronson Alcott; friend, employee and disciple of Emerson, l. lived in a hut in the woods in Walden 1845-47; teacher and anti-slavery activist, unmarried without sex life, probably repressed homosexual, met John Brown and Whitman, travelled to the Great Lakes and Mississippi 1861, d. of tuberculosis.

_____. "Resistance to Civil Government." 1849. Retitled "Civil Disobedience."
    http://www.gutenberg.org/files/71/71-h/71-h.htm
_____. A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers. 1849. New York: Modern Library, 1946.
_____. "Slavery in Massachusetts." 1854.
_____. Walden or Life in the Woods. 1854.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/files/205/205-h/205-h.htm
    Walden, Audiobook.
    http://youtu.be/VcNccA9gu2g
_____. "A Plea for Captain John Brown." Lecture. 1859.
_____. Excursions. 1863.
_____. Journal. 14 vols. 1906.








_________________


_________________

 

RALPH WALDO EMERSON        (1803-1882)

New England Transcendentalist thinker, poet and essayist, came from a Unitarian family; soon widowed, abandoned the Church, influential and prolific lecturer and diarist, emphasizes first-hand apprehension of religion and experience.

_____. Journals. 1820-
_____. "Brahma." Poem.
_____. "The American Scholar: An Oration."  1837.
_____. "Divinity School Address". 1838.
_____. "The Transcendentalist." In Essays.
_____. "History." In Essays.

_____. "Self-Reliance." In Essays.h
_____. "The Over-Soul." In Essays.
_____. "Character."  In Essays.
_____. "The Poet." In Essays.
_____. Essays: First and Second series. 1841, 1844.
_____. "Emancipation in the West Indies." 1844.
_____. "John Brown." 1859.
_____. "Thoreau." 1862.


Some notes on Emerson
(Oxford Companion to American Literature)

"Ralph Waldo Emerson." Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson



_______________

Emerson: NIVEL AVANZADO
_______________

 





 
EDGAR ALLAN POE         (1809-1849)


Edgar Allan Poe, US short story writer, poet and critic; born in Boston, son of British actress Elizabeth Arnold Poe and American actor David Poe, father left, mother died 1811; lived with tobacco exporter John Allan and wife, renamed Edgar Allan Poe, not adopted; travel to Britain with the Allans, school in England 1815-20, attends U of Virginia 1826; gambler, leaves U; quarrels with Allan over debts, enlists in the Army, reconciled with Allan after wife's death, expelled from West Point military academy for gambling, disobedience and drink; lives with aunt Maria Clemm, Baltimore, 1831-35, miserable life, journalist, poverty; Allan dies 1834 leaving him nothing; journalist at Southern Literary Messenger, marries 13-year old cousin Virginia Clemm 1835/6; l. New York 1837-38, then Philadelphia, and back to NY; editorial jobs at Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, Graham's Magazine, New York Evening Mirror, Broadway Journal; distressed by young wife's ill health, widowed 1847; alcoholic, deep-seated emotional conflicts, 1848-49, in love with poet Sarah Helen Whitman and Mrs. Charles Richmond, engaged to his former teenage love Sara Royster Shelton; d. Baltimore after a fit of drunkenness. 

Works: Poems  

 
_____.  Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems. 1829.
_____. Poems by Edgar A. Poe 1831. ("Israfel," "To Helen," "The City in the Sea," etc.).
_____. The Raven and Other Poems. 1845.
_____. A Complete Collection of Poems by Edgar Allan Poe. ("Dream-land")
    

 

Works: Individual tales 

 
_____. "Morella." Short story. 1835.
_____. "Berenice." Short story. 1835.
_____. "Ligeia." Short story. 1838.
_____. The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket. Novel. 1838.
_____. "The Fall of the House of Usher." Short story. 1839.

_____. "William Wilson." Short story. (1839).  
_____. Tales of the Grotesque and the Arabesque. 1840.
_____. "The Murders in the Rue Morgue." Short story. 1841.
_____. "The Masque of the Red Death." Short story. Graham's Magazine (1842)
.

_____. "Eleonora." Story. In Poe, The Gift. 1842.

_____. "The Pit and the Pendulum." Short story. The Gift. 1843.
_____. "The Gold-Bug." Story.  1843.
_____. "The Tell-Tale Heart." Short story.  1843.
_____. "The Balloon-Hoax." 1844.
_____. "The Purloined Letter." Short story. 1845. 
_____. "The Black Cat." Short story. 1843.
_____. "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar." Short story. 1845.
_____. "The Premature Burial." 1850.
_____. Tales. 1845.


Essays:
_____. "The Philosophy of Composition."  1846.
_____. "The Poetic Principle." 1848.
_____. Eureka: A Prose Poem. 1848.





Edgar Allan Poe: poeta irremediable



 

__________________________

NIVEL AVANZADO:

 

- Edgar Allan Poe: Nivel avanzado

__________________________






 

 

 

 

Lunes 20 hablaremos de los primeros autores norteamericanos: Irving y Cooper.


Ya tenemos FECHA DE EXAMEN de la primera convocatoria:

Introducción a la Literatura inglesa -  3 Feb. 2022, 10-13h, aula 1 Central FYL

Recordad que el examen teórico tiene una sección de preguntas de tipo test, y además un tema a elegir entre dos (siendo uno de los temas uno de los principales autores del programa, y otro una época o género, donde puedan entrar varios autores)

Y la segunda parte, el examen práctico, que también tiene que hacer todo el mundo, es un texto para traducir al español o comentar en inglés. Sin diccionarios, etc. (—se da por hecho que habrá palabras que falten—no matter). Se valoran la precisión, la capacidad de comprensión, y el conocimiento de la materia y del idioma inglés.

 

___________________


JAMES FENIMORE COOPER     (1789-1851)


James Fenimore Cooper, US novelist, born in Burlington, NJ, son of William Cooper, founder of Cooperstown; dismissed from Yale; seaman for several years, married, gentleman farmer, successful novelist, moved to New York City, US consul at Lyon, travelled in Europe 1826-33, defender of republicanism in Europe, and conservative aristocratic Federalist back in USA; moved back to Cooperstown, disillusioned with American democracy; father of Susan Fenimore Cooper.

  _____. Precaution. Novel. 1820.
_____. The Spy: A Tale of the Neutral Ground. Historical romance. 1821.
_____. The Pioneers; Or, The Sources of the Susquehanna. Romance. 1923. (Leatherstocking Series, part 4).
_____. The Pilot. Romance. 1823.
_____. The Last of the Mohicans. Novel. 1826. (Leatherstocking series, part 2).
_____. The Prairie: A Tale. 1827. (Leather-Stocking series, part 5).
_____. The Red Rover. Romance. 1827.
_____. Notions of the Americans. Essay. 1828.
_____. The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish. Romance. 1829.
_____. The Water-Witch. Romance. 1830.
_____. A Letter to General Lafayette.  Discourse. 1831.
_____. The Bravo. Historical romance. 1831.
_____. The Heidenmauer, or, The Benedictines. Historical romance. 1832.
_____. The Headsman, or, The Abbaye des Vignerons. Romance. 1833.
_____. A Letter to His Countrymen. Discourse. 1834.
_____. The Monikins. Satirical allegory. 1835.
_____. The American Democrat, or Hints on the Social and Civil Relations of the United States of America. Political theory. 1838.
_____. Homeward Bound; or, The Chase. Novel. 1838.
_____. Home as Found. Novel. 1838. (Sequel to Homeward Bound).
_____. History of the Navy. History. 1839.
_____. The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea. Romance. 1840. (Leather-stocking series, part 3)
_____. The Deerslayer. Novel. 1841. (Leatherstocking series, Part 1).
_____. Wing-and-Wing. Romance. 1842.
_____. Le Mouchoir. 1843. Retitled The Autobiography of a Pocket-Handkerchief.
_____. Wyandotté, or the Hutted Knoll. A Tale. 1843.
_____. Afloat and Ashore. Romance. 1844.
_____. Miles Wallingford. Romance. 1844. (Sequel to Afloat and Ashore).
_____. Satanstoe. Novel. 1845. (Littlepage Manuscripts, 1).
_____. The Chainbearer. Novel. 1845. (Littlepage Manuscripts, 2).
_____. The Redskins, or, Indian and Injin. Novel. 1846. (Littlepage Manuscripts, 3).
_____. The Crater. 1848. (Social utopia).
_____. The Oak Openings, or, The Bee-Hunter. Romance. 1848.
_____. The Ways of the Hour. Novel. 1850.




La marcha hacia el oeste - James Fenimore Cooper
 

 

 

_________________

NIVEL AVANZADO


Más sobre Fenimore Cooper en la Wikipedia: 

"James Fenimore Cooper." Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Fenimore_Cooper
   

–o en esta introducción del Oxford Companion to American Literature sobre su vida y obras: James Fenimore Cooper.


Irving & Cooper - NIVEL AVANZADO

____________________________










WASHINGTON IRVING        (1783-1859)


Washington Irving, US man of letters, b. New York city, wealthy middle class, Revolutionary family background; youngest of 11 children; wrote after brothers William and Peter; law career; traveller in upper NY and Canada; journalist at Peter's Morning Chronicle and Corrector; satirical sketches of NY society, left legal profession, travelled in Europe 1804-6, pursued lit. career in NY, Federalist ideology, celebrated author; fiancée Matilda Hoffman died (and Irving never married); political involvement during the War, then took charge of Liverpool family business, went bankrupt; wrote for a living, met Scott, Byron, Moore, travelled in Paris, in Germany, loved Emily Foster in Paris, lived in England, France, courted Mary Shelley; diplomat in Madrid, travels in Spain; diplomat again in London, and back to Sunnyside, NY, after 17 years; tour on the Western frontier; political connections, returned as ambassador to Spain, retired to Sunnyside, turned historian, celebrated as classic.

  _____. "Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle, Gent." Morning Chronicle (1802-3). (Satires on New York society).
_____. Salmagundi; or, The Whim-Whams and Opinions of Launcelot Langstaff, Esq., and Others. Satirical sketches. Periodical pamphlets, 1807-8. Book, 1808. (Pseudonymous writings, in collaboration with William and Peter Irving, and with brother-in-law J. K. Paulding).
_____. A History of New York, from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty, by Diedrich Knickerbocker. 1809. Rev. 1812, 1819, 1848. (Ps. "Diedrich Knickerbocker").    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13042
_____. "Westminster Abbey." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon.
_____. "The Christmas Dinner." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon.
_____. "Stratford-on-Avon." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon.
_____. "John Bull." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1819-20.
_____. "The Stage-Coach." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1819-20.
_____. "Rip van Winkle." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1819-20.
_____. "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1820.
_____. "English Writers of America." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1819-20.
_____. "Traits of Indian Character." In Irving, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1819-20.
_____.
(Ps. "Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.") The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. Miscellany of tales and essays. Serialized in USA, 1819-20.
_____. (Ps. "Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.") Bracegirdle Hall; or, The Humorists: A Medley. Tales and sketches. 1822. 

_____. Tales of a Traveller. 1824.
_____. History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus. 1828. (Based on Navarrete).
_____. The Alhambra: A Series of Tales and Sketches of the Moors and Spaniards. 1832.  1852.
_____. A Tour of the Prairies. Travel book. Vol. 1 of The Crayon Miscellany. 1835.
_____. Legends of the Conquest of Spain. Vol. 2 of The Crayon Miscellany. 1835.
_____. The Crayon Miscellany. 3 vols. 1835.
_____. Astoria. 1836. Rev. 1849. (History of John Jacob Astor; written with Pierre Irving).
_____. The Adventures of Captain Bonneville, U.S.A. 1837. (Sequel to Astoria).
_____. The Life of Oliver Goldsmith. 1840.
_____. A Book of the Hudson. Sketches. 1849.

_____. Mahomet and His Successors. Biographies. 2 vols. 1849-50.
_____. Life of Washington. 5 vols. 1855-59.







Washington Irving: Vida y obras.



__________________________________



 

 

 

American literature before 1800

Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca. Naufragios y Comentarios. 1542.

Richard Hakluyt (the younger, 1552-1616). Discourse Concerning Western Planting. c. 1600.

Alexander Whitaker  (fl. 1617). Good Newes from Virginia. 1617.

John Smith (1580-1631). A True Relation of Virginia. 1608.
_____. A Description of New England. 1616.
_____. The Generall Historie of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles. 1624.
_____. The True Travels, Adventures, and Observations of Captaine John Smith. 1630.

William Bradford (1590-1657). Of Plymouth Plantation. 1630.

John Winthrop (1588-1649). A Modell of Christian Charity. 1630.

John Cotton et al. The Bay Psalm Book. 1640.

Anne Bradstreet. (1612?-1672). The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America. London, 1650.

John Eliot, The Christian Commonwealth. 1659.
_____. Eliot Indian Bible. 1663.

Edward Taylor, The Poetical Works of Edward Taylor. c. 1680, pub. 1939.

Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana, or the Ecclesiastical History of New England. 1702.

Ebenezer Cook, The Sot-Weed Factor. 1708.

Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758). A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God. 1737.


Benjamin Franklin, (1706-1790). Autobiography. (Posth.). 1818.

Philip Freneau, (1752-1832). The Rising Glory of America. 1771. Rev. 1786.

Thomas Paine, Common Sense. 1776.
_____. The Rights of Man. 1791.
_____. The Age of Reason. 1794.

Thomas Jefferson, Notes on the State of Virginia. 1787.


Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820). "Of the Equality of the Sexes." 1779-1790.


Phillis Wheatley,  Poems. London, 1773.

Sansom Occom (1723-1792). Collection of Hymns and Spiritual Songs. 1774.

Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Written by Himself. 1787.

Jupiter Hammon (1711-1806?). Address to the Negroe: In the State of New York. 1787.

Royall Tyler,  The Contrast. Drama. 1787.

Hugh Henry Brackenridge (1746-1816). Modern Chivalry. Sketches. 1792-1815.

Charles Brockden Brown, Wieland: or, The Transformation. Novel. 1798.


Joel Barlow, The Columbiad. Epic. 1807.

 

Francis Scott Key, "The Star Spangled Banner", the national anthem of the United States of America. 

____________________

NIVEL AVANZADO:

- AMERICAN LITERATURE (NIVEL AVANZADO)

- A documentary on THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR OF AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE

- Tradiciones orales nativas americanas (Richard Gray)

- The Perpetual Civil War for American Independence
____________________ 


4. Literatura inglesa del siglo XIX

8. Literatura norteamericana 1960-

La sección B ya está completa en el sentido de que tenéis en la red todos los materiales necesarios para el estudio. Ánimo con ellos.  

En clase presencial seguimos con la unidad 5 de la sección A, Literatura norteamericana del siglo XIX, la última unidad que veremos presencialmente:

 


 

 ____________________

Y despedimos el curso con una Sección B (NIVEL AVANZADO, y fuera de programa) sobre  algunos autores norteamericanos recientes:

Literatura norteamericana contemporánea.

- Prose After Postmodernism

______________________

 




 

 

 

____________________


SECCIÓN B, tema 8 (Literatura norteamericana 1960-)

 

 

Philip Roth (1933-2018)

Jewish-American postmodernist novelist; l. Connecticut 1972-; Gold Medal of the Arts 1986, White House, 1998; Gold Medal for Narrative of the American Academy of Arts and Letters 2001; Booker International 2011, Premio Príncipe de Asturias de las Letras 2012; National Book Award, PEN/Faulkner Award, National Book Critics Circle Award; complete works published by the Library of America.

 

Roth, Philip. Portnoy's Complaint. Novel.  1967, 1968, 1969.

_____. The Breast. Novel. 1972. (Kepesh books).

_____. My Life as a Man. 1974.

_____. Reading Myself and Others. Essays.  1975.

_____. The Professor of Desire. 1977. (Kepesh books).

_____. The Ghost Writer. Novel.  1979. (Zuckerman series) (Holocaust).

_____. The Anatomy Lesson. Novel. 1983. (Zuckerman series).

_____. The Counterlife. Novel. 1986.. (Zuckerman series).

_____. The Facts: A Novelist's Autobiography. 1988. (Roth books).

_____. Deception. 1990. (Roth books). (Adultery).

_____. Sabbath's Theater. Novel. 1995. (1995 National Book Award)

_____. American Pastoral. Novel. 1997. (Zuckerman series).  (1998 Pulitzer Prize).

_____. I Married a Communist. Novel. 1998. (Zuckerman series).

_____. The Human Stain. Novel.  2000.* (Zuckerman series).

_____. The Dying Animal. Novel. 2001.

_____. The Plot against America. Novel. 2004. (Alternative history novel on Charles Lindbergh and Nazism).

_____. Everyman. 2006.

_____. Nemesis. Novel. 2010.




Del manual de Bertens y D'haen, unas notas sobre Philip Roth, novelista judío norteamericano, perpetuo candidato al Nobel que, recientemente fallecido, se quedó sin él. 

https://litinglesa.blogspot.com/2022/04/philip-roth-1933-2018.html


Y aquí una entrevista con Philip Roth:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/16/books/review/my-life-as-a-writer.html




De Roth tenemos como lectura en las fotocopias el primer capítulo de su novela The Human Stain (1, Everyone Knows, 1-75). También hay una buena película sobre esta novela.


__________________________________


NIVEL AVANZADO: Philip Roth Unleashed.

and

3 Yale lectures on The Human Stain.

 

___________________________________




Vamos terminando la sección B incluida en el programa (literatura del siglo XX) con unas palabras sobre literatura norteamericana desde 1960-, mencionando a:

John Barth, novelista experimental y postmoderno,

https://litinglesa.blogspot.com/2022/04/john-barth-1930.html

 (más notas sobre JOHN BARTH aquí)

y a

Anne Sexton,

 

poeta existencialista y suicida.  (Obituario de Anne Sexton en el New York Times).

De todos estos autores tenéis alguna lectura en el bloque de fotocopias. De Barth,
el relato metaficcional "Life-Story"; de Sexton, los poemas "The Abortion" y "Cripples and Other Stories".  

- SOME NOTES ON ANNE SEXTON.

 

________________________

NIVEL AVANZADO: LA POESÍA INTIMISTA Y CONFESIONAL

 

________________________

 

De Joyce Carol Oates, tenemos entre las lecturas el relato "Secret Observations on the Goat-Girl".

   Wikipedia on JCO.


 

 

 



De Toni Morrison, novelista del realismo mágico y último premio Nobel de la literatura norteamericana incluido en el programa, podéis leer en las fotocopias un capítulo de su novela Beloved (cap. 3, 239-75).

Más notas sobre Toni Morrison. 

 El contexto para leer el texto de Beloved (Wikipedia)

 

 

_______________ 

 

 

NIVEL AVANZADO:


- FLANNERY O'CONNOR, CARSON McCULLERS & JOYCE CAROL OATES

- Una entrevista con Joyce Carol Oates:

Lopate, Leonard. "The Deaths that Changed Joyce Carol Oates' Life." Interview with Joyce Carol Oates. Audio. (The Leonard Lopate Show). WNYC 13 Oct. 2015.*

         https://www.wnyc.org/story/joyce-carol-oates-lost-landscape/


- Recordad que tenemos otros novelistas premios Nobel en lengua inglesa, varios todavía en activo. Y en poesía norteamericana también tenemos dos Premios Nobel recientes:

En 2016, el cantautor Bob Dylan. Aquí algunas de sus canciones en un concierto de mediados de los años setenta:


 

 

Y en 2020, la poetisa Louise Glück. Aquí pueden leerse u oírse algunos de sus poemas.

Aquí lee Glück algunos poemas de su libro Faithful and Virtuous Night:




 

 


 


Sección B, unidad 7: Literatura inglesa 1960-2000

Un blog sobre literatura inglesa (y norteamericana)

  Este blog fue utilizado como material auxiliar para una asignatura del grado de Lenguas Modernas en la Universidad de Zaragoza, asignatur...