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English 429.960
Town or Country: Warring Ideologies on Living the Good Life
Barbara Riebling profile

TR 5:30-8:10

Fulfills Distributional Course in History & Tradition (for students admitted before Fall 2006)

From ancient times to the present, Western literary texts have engaged in a central cultural debate: where can we live the best life - in the city, in the country, or in some space in between? This debate continues into the present as we grapple with issues such as urban decay, contaminated industrial sites, and suburban/exurban sprawl. In this course, we will examine what social, moral, and political values we attach to these locations - country purity, city sophistication, suburban safety? Naturally, writers engaged in this debate not only define themselves and their choices as ideal, they also create an opposite other, e.g. the country bumpkin, the urban degenerate, the suburban conformist. We will begin our discussion of city versus country by looking at such classical authors as Aristotle, Virgil, and Juvenal. We will trace the debate into the early modern era by reading the city comedies of Jonson and Middleton, as well as Jonson and Marvells great house poems, looking also at Wycherleys urbane comedy, The Country Wife. We will discuss the late nineteenth/early twentieth-century city beautiful movement after examining works by major Romantic poets who find salvation in the English countryside. Finally, we will conclude the course with 20th-century utopian/distopian fantasy literature that reveals modern anxieties about the environments technology has enabled our societies to construct.



updated 2008-07-08
 
 
 
 


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Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
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