Literature: French Literature Post 1945
Course details
Course code
Q00017921Course date
Number of classes
10 sessionsTimetable
Tutor
Stephen SmithFee range
How you'll learn
Venue
OnlineLevel of study
Entry Levels 1,2,3: If you have never studied this subject before and you’re not confident in your skills, Entry levels are a good starting point.
Level 1: Covers basic skills and knowledge needed for this subject
Level 2: Building on basic knowledge or experience. Similar to Grade 4/ C at GCSE or O level in England or Standards in Scotland.
Level 3: Learn about the topic in-depth and have a broad range of skills. Independent working Equivalent to an A level in England or Higher in Scotland.
Beginners: A perfect introduction if you have no experience and skills in this subject.
Improvers: The next step if you have basic skills or knowledge but want to progress them further.
Advanced: Build on the solid experience and skills you have in this subject, applying your skills and knowledge in a more complex way.
Course overview
Course description
The course will begin with Camus’ classic Absurdist text, The Plague, a novel which remains an urgent communication today. Discover or rediscover this seminal work.
Our second text, Memoirs of Hadrian by Marguerite Yourcenar is a historical novel, describing the life of the Emperor Hadrian. It has a delicacy of expression and continues themes first initiated by Flaubert.
The third text is Missing Person by the second Nobel Prize winner among our authors, Patrick Modiano. Camus, is of course, the first. Modiano, underappreciated in Britain, explores issues of memory and the maintenance of identity under individual and societal pressures. He is a writer one should read, as his aesthetic and concerns arise from his experience of the postwar years.
Our fourth text is Street of Thieves by Mathias Enard, one of France’s leading contemporary novelists. Again this tackles issues of identity in a world where borders are flexed and redefined.
Our final text is by the third Nobel laureate, Annie Ernaux and is a fascinating example of auto-fiction.
As a whole the course will forge links between the politics of postwar France and the arts, between conformity and subversion and will beyond these themes inspire you to read more deeply into modern French literature.
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What financial support is available?
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What other support is available?
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All of our digital content, teaching and learning activities and assessments are designed to be accessible so if you need any additional support you can discuss this with the education experts during your enrolment journey and we will do all we can to make sure you have optimal access.