The Life and Times of the English Epic
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LecturesDr. Sara Brown, Faith Acker
This course explores historical contexts of, earliest inceptions of, and modern revisions to the English Epic genre. Divided along a loosely chronological structure, the course will touch upon core Classical and European texts before shifting to the national epic texts of the English Renaissance and surveying the afterlife of the English Epic. Spenser and Milton specifically constructed epic poems in imitation of Homer, Vergil, Ovid, and Dante, but, during the Renaissance, English national identity and English religious beliefs were deeply intertwined, and these early English Epics—like much of the literature of their time—reflect this congruency. After the Romantic era, the English Epic was adapted and occasionally contorted into a dizzying array of genres and forms, in texts that sometimes challenged the existing status quo of English nationalism and often incorporated epic elements into popular literature.
The first third of the course will highlight some foundational epic texts that established the traditional structure of the epic poem as a genre. While not itself an English Epic, Vergil’s Aeneid was first translated into English in 1490, becoming an essential and widely influential text in England during the late Middle Ages and the entire Renaissance. Medieval and early Renaissance epics from continental Europe, including the French chansons de geste and Dante’s Divine Comedy, intensified English desire for a national epic, as evinced in Spenser’s Faerie Queene and Milton’s Paradise Lost, both of which we will study in the second third of the course. Finally, the last third will explore the afterlife of the English Epic in a broader array of genres: Romantic poetry, spy thrillers, fantasy novels, and British cinema. The course will also touch briefly upon works that subvert and manipulate conventions of the traditional epic, such as the novels of Thomas Hardy and recent films by Edgar Wright and Simon Pegg.
  • Lecture01 Origins and Definitions
    01:31:04
    01:31:04
  • Lecture02 Ovid Metamorphoses
    01:29:49
    01:29:49
  • Lecture03 Virgil's Aeneid part I
    01:30:43
    01:30:43
  • Lecture04 Virgil's Aeneid part II
    01:41:43
    01:41:43
  • Lecture05 the French Epic
    01:31:04
    01:31:04
  • Lecture06 Le Mort d'Arthur
    01:32:23
    01:32:23
  • Lecture07 Dante part I
    01:33:42
    01:33:42
  • Lecture08 Dante part II
    01:32:00
    01:32:00
  • Lecture09 The Gospel of Mark
    01:33:47
    01:33:47
  • Lecture10 Spenser part I
    01:37:04
    01:37:04
  • Lecture11 Spenser part II
    01:33:01
    01:33:01
  • Lecture12 The Renaissance
    01:34:29
    01:34:29
  • Lecture13 The Epic and Paradise Lost
    01:42:07
  • Lecture14 Paradise Lost and the Epic Hero
    01:39:16
    01:39:16
  • Lecture15 Concluding Milton's Epic
    01:32:30
    01:32:30
  • Lecture16 The Epic After Milton
    01:39:30
    01:39:30
  • Lecture17 The Epic and the Romantic Imagination
    01:33:44
    01:33:44
  • Lecture18 Obscuring the Epic form
    01:40:58
    01:40:58
  • Lecture19 Cinema
    01:25:00
    01:25:00
  • Lecture20 Bond and Beowulf
    01:35:25
    01:35:25
  • Lecture22 Perelandra with Gabriel Schenk
    01:30:30
    01:30:30
  • Lecture23 The Subtle Knife
    01:32:51
    01:32:51
  • Lecture24 Coda
    01:26:57
    01:26:57