Anne Hall

Fisher-Bennett Hall 324
215-573-4577

Lecturer, B.A. Wellesley College, M.A.T. Harvard University, Ph.D. Stanford University


For twenty-five years at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, I taught courses in Renaissance literature, poetry, and classical literature in translation (both poetry and philosophy). With a wonderful colleague, Prof. Larry Goldberg, I taught a four-semester sequence on "The Elements of Politics."

For the profession, I wrote on Renaissance prose, Spenser, Sidney, and some theoretical question about the study of Renaissance literature (chiefly, the question, "Is there such a thing as too much history?") Then, for personal reasons, I left UNC and found myself in the happy position of having plenty of leisure for what I love best--dwelling with great thinking in great books.

My goal as a teacher of literature is to analyze a poem's structure of feeling and to judge its success in answering the emotional difficulties it raises. My goal as a teacher of literature treated philosophically is to discover the fundamental difficulties in the human condition that the author is wrestling with. I agree with Marianne Moore that the greatest of life's vitalities is "the zest for perfection as it communicates its excitement to others." My courses at Penn have been Shakespeare; Poetry and Philosophy in Ancient Greece; Old Bonds, New Contracts and the Problem of Money; The Tide and Seaweed of History; The Bible as Literature; Belief in the Age of the Educated Cosmopolite.

Faculty Awards
(more)
2008 The Provost’s Award for Teaching Excellence by Non-Standing Faculty
recipient

Coursework
English329.401Literature and Political Culture among the Ancients - Spring 2010
English359.302Old Bonds, New Contracts and the Problem of Marriage - Fall 2009
English329.401Poetry and Political Philosophy in Ancient Greece - Spring 2009
English326.301Shakespeare and the Argument of Comedy - Fall 2008
English359.401Culture Without the Cult - Spring 2008
English033.401The Bible as Literature - Fall 2007
English329.401Poetry and Political Philosophy in Ancient Greece - Fall 2007
English329.301Poetry and Political Philosophy in Ancient Greece - Spring 2007
English033.401The Bible as Literature - Fall 2006
English359.301Topics in Modernism: Old Bonds, New Contracts, and the Problem of Freedom - Fall 2006
English359.301Belief in the Age of the Urban Cosmopolite - Spring 2006
English033.401The Bible as Literature - Fall 2005
English326.301Greatsouled or Graceful: Classical and Christian Ethics in the Plays of Shakespeare - Fall 2005
English359.301The Tide and Seawood of History - Spring 2005
English329.301Topics in Classicism and Literature: Poetry and Political Philosophy in Ancient Greece - Fall 2004
English033.001The Bible as Literature - Fall 2004
English036.001Shakespeare: Histories and Comedies - Spring 2004
English016.303New Laws and New Orders - Fall 2003
English396.301Poetry and Political Philosophy in Ancient Greek Literature - Fall 2003
English040.303Major British Poets 1660-Present - Spring 2003
English020.302Major British Writers 1350-1660 - Spring 2003
English020.301Major British Writers 1350-1660 - Fall 2002
English383.301New World Contracts, Old World Bonds, and the Problem with Money - Fall 2002
English296.401Ancient Greeks: Poetry & Political Wisdom - Spring 2002
English016.301The Ancients & Shakespeare - Spring 2002
English296.401Classical Backgrounds in English Literature - Fall 2001
English020.302Major British Writers 1350-1660 - Fall 2001
English030.001Introduction to English Renissance - Spring 2001
English296.401Topics In Classical Background - Fall 2000
English037.001Shakespeare Tragedies - Spring 2000
English235.301Topics in Shakespeare - Fall 1999

 
 
 
 


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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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