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The University of Sheffield

Literature of the English Country House

The University of Sheffield via FutureLearn

Overview

Reconstruct the literary history of the English country house

For over 450 years, country houses have attracted the attention of celebrated writers like Thomas More and Charles Dickens.

On this six-week course, you’ll trace depictions of country houses through the works of some of England’s most celebrated writers and some lesser known authors. You’ll journey through the early 16th century to the late 19th century, exploring what the country houses depicted in literature represent and say about society at the time.

Explore the country house as a tool for social commentary

From Jane Austen to Oscar Wilde, many writers throughout history have used their work to highlight social inequality and difference.

Drawing on a range of perspectives including politics and gender, you’ll discuss what close readings of key texts can tell us about contemporary attitudes, and develop your own textual interpretations.

Expand your knowledge of the literary canon

Guided by experts in English Literature, you’ll gain insights from leading academics in the fields of various forms and periods of literature.

Collaborating with your fellow learners throughout, you’ll be introduced to new perspectives and approaches to literature, enriching how you engage with both the texts on this course and beyond.

Access materials from the Special Collections archives at the University of Sheffield

Using archival material including prose, poems, and plays, you’ll develop key close reading skills and research approaches, allowing you to interpret each text more thoroughly and deepen your knowledge of literary history.

By the end of this course, you’ll have explored a wide range of texts centred on the English country house. Using the perspectives you’ve explored, you’ll be able to discuss representations of country houses in literature and engage with texts more deeply.

This course is designed for anyone who enjoys reading and discussing literary texts in English. It would be particularly beneficial for those who are preparing for further study in English Literature, building your text analysis skills. If you are already at degree level in English, this course will supplement your studies.

Syllabus

  • Introduction
    • Welcome to the course
    • An introduction to close reading
    • Thomas More's 'Utopia'
    • Research approaches: literature and history
    • Quiz and review
  • Reconstructing the literature of the country house
    • Welcome to Week 2
    • Research approaches: context, composition and reception
    • Working with manuscript material
    • Quiz and review
    • Additional activity
  • Politeness and the 18th-century country house
    • From coffee houses to country houses: politeness and conversation in the 18th century
    • Understanding print culture
    • Women, politics and the literature of the country house
    • Quiz and review
  • Minds and manners: Jane Austen and the country house
    • The country house in 'Pride and Prejudice'
    • Quiz and a look forward to next week
    • Additional activities
  • The malevolent or reclusive owner
    • Nameless deeds
    • Research Approaches: intertextuality
    • Behind closed doors: 'Great Expectations' and the reclusive owner
    • Quiz and reflections on the week
  • Exit through the giftshop: Transformation
    • Oscar Wilde and the end of the century
    • 'The Importance of Being Earnest'
    • Wilde times
    • Check your understanding
    • Making connections
    • Final reflections

Taught by

Jim Fitzmaurice

Reviews

4.8 rating, based on 208 Class Central reviews

4.7 rating at FutureLearn based on 267 ratings

Start your review of Literature of the English Country House

  • Anonymous
    Thank you so much for assembling this course! Had it not been for the scholarly yet accessible discussion provided by the educators and the judicious selection of extracts to study, I would probably never have explored half the texts covered. I would...
  • Diana Reynolds Roome completed this course.

    This course has been quite a revelation to me in several ways. I had never considered the English country house in relation to literature before, so as I have loved both for years, making a connection between them was very enriching. Decades ago I...
  • Anonymous
    By taking the course Literature of the English Country House I have learned new approaches on the study of english literature and I have enjoyed knowing a bit more of some great literary works and their authors. As most novels and writings studied...
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    If you enjoyed English novels, this is a very absorbing, enlightening and interesting course. I have learnt different ways of approaching books; that first reading doesn't always help you to under the entire meanings ( or hidden meanings of a book, as...
  • Anonymous
    This is a gem of a course! Each week focuses on a different era in country house literature, and a different aspect or issue related to the period. The course is extremely well structured and the video lectures are excellent. It has been a while since I have read older literature and the course provided a great reminder of how rewarding and enjoyable it is. Having now completed the course I feel inspired to continue exploring some of the genres covered in the course and to apply the techniques covered to my future reading.

    Overall this is an excellent course; there are exercises each week and having taken the time to complete these and discuss them I feel that I have taken a great deal from the experience. Highly recommended!
  • Anonymous
    A big Thank You to all of you and your great efforts to lead us through a very interesting course with a lot of food for our brain. It was very interesting to have a share in your expertise, deep knowledge and most of all your enthusiasm for reading literature.

    I guess I will be more aware about discription of country houses, their possible meaning for the story and their distinct architecture. I take away a lot of stimulation, when in future reading a book to do it not only for fun, but I also will try to see intertextuality.
  • Katarzyna Wiktoria Klag

    Katarzyna Wiktoria Klag completed this course, spending 5 hours a week on it and found the course difficulty to be medium.

    The course was very interesting and engaging, I learnt quite a lot on it and it motivated me to read literature which I have not tried before. The course uses the technique of close reading - short fragments of literary works are close-read (analysed); you do not have to read them in their entirety, but it definitely helps. I enjoyed the lectures which analyse the excerpts in detail and provide new ways of understanding them.
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    I strongly recommend this amazing course to all fellow learners! What a remarkable time I had learning about Country House Literature. This course taught me so many new things that have added to my enjoyment of reading. The wonderful videos filmed at...
  • Sue Batcheler

    Sue Batcheler completed this course.

    This course took me to some unexpected places and was all the more interesting because of it. The variety of authors and types of writing as well as the input from a variety of teachers kept the learning lively, introduced me to some new skills when reading and and some authors and works previously unknown to me. The Country House was the linking theme but this course has provided a much more diverse range of topics as well and for me is a jumping off point to all sorts of other avenues of learning. I also appreciated the constant presence of a Mentor who responded to the discussions and comments from students. I very much recommend it.
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    The course spans the lives of several country houses associated with specific authors, poets and playwrights, from Ben Jonson to Oscar Wilde and looks at the way Country House developed, declined and found a new purpose over the centuries. It is presented by a variety of lecturers and professors from the University of Sheffield and without exception they are passionate , engaging and informative about their speciality. I'd recommend it to anyone with an interest in literature and social history.
  • Anonymous
    I’m grateful for the opportunity to study this course. It’s wonderfully construed and embraces an analysis of literary works from the early 16th (Thomas More’s Utopia to the late 19th centuries (Oscar Wilde’s plays), thus connecting different epochs into one, ever changing continuity through the image of the country house. For me, this course has revealed new authors, and the authors I was familiar with were presented in a new and unexpected way. I’m especially grateful for getting acquainted with Georgiana Cavendish and for discovering the relation between Ann Radcliff’s and Jane Austen’s works. The lecturers in all these six weeks were not just knowledgeable but artistic and passionate about their subjects. Thanks a lot to the team!
  • Anonymous
    I’m grateful for the opportunity to study this course. It’s wonderfully construed and embraces an analysis of literary works from the early 16th (Thomas More’s Utopia to the late 19th centuries (Oscar Wilde’s plays), thus connecting different epochs into one, ever changing continuity through the image of the country house. For me, this course has revealed new authors, and the authors I was familiar with were presented in a new and unexpected way. I’m especially grateful for getting acquainted with Georgiana Cavendish and for discovering the relation between Ann Radcliff’s and Jane Austen’s works. The lecturers in all these six weeks were not just knowledgeable but artistic and passionate about their subjects. Thanks a lot to the team!
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    Opened my eyes to links between authors and readers.
    Hitherto had not thought about where authors lived and country houses they might have visited.
    For instance...Jane Austen lived 8 years after Chatsworth House was finished. She might have visited but more likely just to have heard about it..
    Living at Chawton ..and not apparently wanting to leave...she left sight of it to her imagination and that of her readers.
    She would not have been disappointed and neither would Elizabeth Bennett !
  • Ann Cowan
    I enjoyed the course a lot and looked forward each week to a new topic. I appreciated the range of teaching/learning styles eg presentation, dialogue between two tutors, video and explanation of text.
    I enjoyed particularly learning about the wider social implications of literacy and also the exercises in close reading of text.
    I didn’t contribute to the discussions between learners as I felt the other students were a lot more knowledgable! I was happy to learn from them.
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    A very interesting course that covered a wide range of literature as well as teaching techniques for close analysis. The first week or two were challenging and would have benefitted from a more detailed explanation of what was expected as it felt like...
  • Anonymous
    This is a well-designed and hugely enjoyable course. The educators wear their expertise lightly, approaching the topic in an accessible yet scholarly way. A mix of videos, articles, activities and dialogue through comment boxes makes for an engaging, varied format. The subject area itself is absolutely fascinating and I loved the fact that the course covers some very well-known country house literature, such as works by Jane Austen and Charles Dickens, along with less familiar texts from the 16th to 19th centuries. Would recommend whole-heartedly!
  • Anonymous

    Anonymous completed this course.

    Having just stopped work at the age of 70, I decided that I needed to keep the brain ticking. Having read English and taught it for many years it was good to have the chance to share and be taught again. Sometimes I found the presentations a little distracting...
  • Anonymous
    Lots of thought provoking material. I would say that this is a course mainly for students of literature rather than for those interested in the country house, and some of the connections were nebulous, although more evident as it progressed. But literature is always interesting. Kept me absorbed, and slowed me down to think and avoid skimming through, totally different learning process for me as a recently retired medic. So far both the courses I have done on this site have been impressive.

  • Glen Wasson

    Glen Wasson completed this course.

    I am a retired engineer and never respected the liberal arts until recently. I have taken several courses in literature and collected over a hundred books in my library. I live in Yuma, Arizona USA.
  • Anonymous
    I took this course without expecting all that information you gave. It's far more than I expected. From Shakespeare to Wilde, feminine literature, so many.
    I’ve been introduced to new authors and to new types of literature. I plan to read the authors you mentioned. I have learned so much about new authors (especially Gothic) in English Literature as well as many real personages of the epocha. I´d like to see more (the choice up to you) literature.

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