English 105: Introduction to Issues in Literature and Culture

Contemporary Scottish Literature and Culture: Imagining the Nation in an age of Globalization

Fall, 2002

Dr. Leith Davis

email: leith@sfu.ca

web site: http://www.sfu.ca/personal/leith


This course looks at the representation of Scotland and Scottishness in contemporary fiction, poetry and film by artists residing both in and outside of Scotland. We begin with a well-known novel by Irvine Welsh, Trainspotting then move on to consider the work of the work of lesser known Scottish writers: novelist Janice Galloway, short story writer AL Kennedy and poets Robert Crawford, Liz Lochhead, Kathleen Jamie and others. We next study a novel by a Canadian writer, Alistair MacLeod, which considers the Scottish diaspora in Canada. Our last novel is by Audrey Thomas, a BC writer who uses the historical link between Scotland and the Hudson's Bay Company as a background for her novel. Although the course focuses on Scotland, a number of the questions we will be asking will have relevance to our own situation as Canadians: what is national identity? what purposes does the expression of national identity serve? how does the contemporary interest in national identity relate to the increase in globalization? what kinds of expectations are brought to bear on nations by members of other nations? what is the relation of the nation to the members of its diaspora? what role do the members of a diaspora play in the creation of national identity? what is the relation of diaspora to transnationalism?


Required Reading:

Galloway, Janice. The Trick is to Keep Breathing (Dalkey Archive).

MacLeod, Alistair. No Great Mischief (Random).

Thomas, Audrey. Isobel Gunn (Penguin).

Welsh, Irvine. Trainspotting (Norton).

Plus photocopied material.

 

Course Requirements:

Essay #1 (4 pages): 25%

Essay #2 (8 pages): 40%

Participation and attendance: 5%

Final Exam: 30% (closed book)

Note:


 Syllabus:

WEEK ONE:

Wed., Sept. 4:

Introduction to course

WEEK TWO:

Mon., Sept. 9

Introduction to concepts of course.

Begin Trainspotting

Wed., Sept. 11

Trainspotting

WEEK THREE:

Mon., Sept. 16

Trainspotting

Wed. Sept. 18

Trainspotting

WEEK FOUR:

Mon., Sept. 23

Trainspotting (movie and novel)

Wed., Sept. 25

Trainspotting (movie and novel)

WEEK FIVE:

Monday, Sept. 30

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

Wed., Oct. 2

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

WEEK SIX:

Mon., Oct. 7

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

Wed., Oct. 9

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

WEEK SEVEN:

Mon., Oct. 14: HOLIDAY

Wed. Oct. 16

The Trick Is To Keep Breathing

First essay due

WEEK EIGHT:

Mon., Oct. 21

AL Kennedy, and poems (handouts)

Wed., Oct. 23

AL Kennedy, and poems (handouts)

WEEK NINE :

Mon., Oct. 28

No Great Mischief

Wed. Oct. 30

No Great Mischief

WEEK TEN:

Mon., Nov. 4

No Great Mischief

Wed., Nov. 6

No Great Mischief

WEEK ELEVEN:

Mon., Nov. 11: HOLIDAY

Wed., Nov. 13

No Great Mischief

WEEK TWELVE:

Mon., Nov. 18

Isobel Gunn

Wed., Nov. 20

Isobel Gunn

WEEK THIRTEEN

Mon. Nov. 25

Isobel Gunn

Wed. Nov. 27

Isobel Gunn

WEEK FOURTEEN:

Mon., Dec. 2

The "Braveheart-ization" of Scotland