Module: CW7021-30 Context Module: The Love Story
Level: 7
Credit Value: 30
Module Tutor: Lucy English
Module Tutor Contact Details: l.english@bathspa.ac.uk
1.Brief description and aims of module
Like other context modules, this one aims to help students explore the relationship between their own creative writing and the large public world as represented by an important theme, tradition or genre, or by an aspect of contemporary literary culture. This is where students step back and situate their own work, understanding some of its wider implications and an aspect of its context. The aim is that this different set of questions and pressures should pose new challenges, invigorating the writing and taking it in new directions – or at least enabling the writer to consider new possibilities. Detailed aims are as follows:
2.Outline syllabus
Students will read a selection of texts, each of which has been chosen to provide a different perspective on the topic. Most of the texts will be identified in advance to allow for preparatory reading, but up to three may be chosen after group discussion. Most will be literary works, but a small proportion may be works of critical argument or theory. To some extent, the tutor’s selection of texts will reflect the composition of the group, especially in terms of the balance between prose-writers and poets.
Indicative text list for CW7021:
In this module we will look at some classic and contemporary examples of writing about
relationships. We will ask where our ideas of 'romance' originated and how relevant they are in the twenty first century. We will explore the different facets of human relationships in fiction and poetry: not just boy meets girl, but also the complex and often difficult relationships within families and across generations. “What is love?” we will ask ourselves. Is it madness and obsession? How can we write about this experience in a convincing and original fashion? We will examine plot structures and elements of storytelling. We will look at the role of the hero and the heroine. We will learn how to create effective dialogue. We will learn the techniques of how to create a compelling love story. Every week we shall take a text as a starting point for our discussions, and writing exercises will be based on the themes within these texts. The texts include novels, short stories and poetry. There will be plenty of opportunities to workshop your own writing.
Set texts (indicative):
Kate Atkinson Life After Life
Jane Austen Pride and Prejudice
Charlotte Bronte Jane Eyre
Ted Hughes Birthday Letters
Vladimir Nabokov Lolita
Madeline Miller The Song of Achilles
Alice Munro Too Much Happiness
Maggie O’ Farrell The Hand that First Held Mine
3.Teaching and learning activities