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Lesson Posted on 30 May Learn English
Outline of UGC NET English literature
Srivarshini
Introduction to the syllabus of UGC NET English paper 2
Unit 1: Literary Theory and Criticism
- Major literary theories and movements (e.g., Formalism, Structuralism, Postcolonialism, Feminism)
- Key concepts in literary criticism (e.g., authorship, textuality, intertextuality)
- Understanding different approaches to analyzing literary texts
Unit 2: British Literature
- Old English and Middle English Literature
- Renaissance and Elizabethan Literature
- Restoration and 18th-Century Literature
- Romantic and Victorian Literature
- Modernist and Postmodernist Literature
Unit 3: American Literature
- Colonial and Early American Literature
- Transcendentalism and Romanticism
- Realism and Naturalism
- Modernist and Postmodernist Literature
- Contemporary American Literature
Unit 4: Literary Movements and Genres
- Symbolism and Imagism
- Modernism and Postmodernism
- Harlem Renaissance and African American Literature
- Existentialism and Absurdism
- Postcolonial Literature and Diaspora Writing
Unit 5: Indian Writing in English
- Early Indian English Literature
- Post-Independence Indian Literature
- Contemporary Indian Literature
- Dalit Literature and Feminist Writing
- Regional Literature in English Translation
Unit 6: Literary Forms and Techniques
- Poetry: Major poets, forms, and poetic devices
- Drama: Major playwrights and dramatic techniques
- Fiction: Novel and short story analysis, narrative techniques
- Non-Fiction: Essays, memoirs, and literary non-fiction
Unit 7: Literary Criticism and Theoretical Approaches
- Reader-response theory
- Poststructuralism and Deconstruction
- Postcolonial theory and subaltern studies
- Gender and feminist theory
- Ecocriticism and environmental literary studies
Unit 8: Literary History and Movements
- Literary movements and their characteristics (e.g., Romanticism, Modernism, Postcolonialism)
- Historical and cultural contexts of different literary periods
- Notable authors, works, and themes associated with specific literary movements
Unit 9: Comparative Literature
- Comparative approaches to literature
- Comparative studies of different cultures and literary traditions
- Literary themes and motifs across different literatures
- Influences and intertextuality between different literary traditions
Unit 10: Research Methodology
- Approaches to literary research
- Formulating research questions and objectives
- Research design and methodology
- Analyzing and interpreting literary texts
- Writing research papers and academic essays
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Adverbials modify or tell us something about the sentence or the verb. It may be a single adverb, a phrase, or a prepositional phrase, or clause element.
When an adverbial modifies a verb, it changes the meaning of that verb.
For example:
When an adverbial modifies a sentence, the meaning of the sentence changes.
For example:
Word groups that are also considered to be adverbials can also modify verbs: a prepositional phrase, a noun phrase, a finite clause or a non-finite clause.
Multi-word adverbials are sometimes called adverbial phrases.
For example:
For example:
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Adverbs
There are several different classes of adverbs :
Adjective | Pretty | Serious | Fast | Quiet |
---|---|---|---|---|
Example | She was a pretty girl. | He was a serious boy. | It was a fast car. | They were quiet children. |
Adverb | Prettily | Seriously | Fast | Quietly |
Example | The bird sang prettily. | The policeman spoke seriously. | Schumacher drives fast. | The woman spoke quietly. |
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You cannot really go wrong here, we got rid of most of our cases and as a result English is easier than many other languages because nouns and some indefinite pronouns (anyone, someone, everyone, and so on) only have a distinctive case form for the possessive. There are a few remnants of old English though, and pronouns have distinctive forms in all three cases and should be used with a bit more care.
The pronoun cases are simple though. There are only three:
1. Subjective case: pronouns used as subject.
2. Objective case: pronouns used as objects of verbs or prepositions.
3. Possessive case: pronouns which express ownership.
Personal Pronoun | ||
Subjective | Objective | Possessive |
---|---|---|
Referring to the subject in a sentence | Referring to the object in a sentence | The apostrophe form of the word (Ram's). |
I | Me | Mine |
You | You | Yours |
He | Him | His |
She | Her | Hers |
It | It | Its |
We | Us | Ours |
They | Them | Theirs |
Who | Whom | Whose |
These pronouns, and who and its compounds, are the only words that are inflected in all three cases (subjective, objective, possessive). In nouns the first two cases (subjective and objective) are indistinguishable, and are called the common case. One result of this simplicity is that, the sense of case being almost lost, the few mistakes that can be made are made often, even by native speakers, some of them so often that they are now almost right by prescription.
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A clause is a part of a sentence. There are two main types: independent (main clauses), dependent (subordinate clauses).
1. Independedent Clauses:
CO-ORDINATING CONJUNCTIONS | ||
---|---|---|
and | but | for |
or | nor | so |
yet |
Dependent Clauses:
A dependent (subordinate) clause is part of a sentence; it contains a subject and verb but does not express a complete thought. They can make sense on their own, but, they are dependent on the rest of the sentence for context and meaning. They are usually joined to an independent clause to form a complex sentence.
Dependent clauses often begin with a a subordinating conjunction or relative pronoun (see below) that makes the clause unable to stand alone.
Subordinating Conjunctions
after | although | as | because |
---|---|---|---|
before | even if | even though | if |
in order that
| once
| provided that
| rather than
|
since
| so that
| than | that |
though | unless | until | when |
whenever | where | whereas | wherever |
whether | while | why |
Relative Pronouns | ||
---|---|---|
that | which | whichever |
who | whoever | whom |
whose | whosever | whomever |
For example:
The door opened because the man pushed it.
Dependent clauses can be nominal, adverbial or adjectivial.
A nominal clause (noun clause) functions like a noun or noun phrase. It is a group of words containing a subject and a finite verb of its own and contains one of the following: that | if | whether
For example:
Noun clauses answer questions like "who(m)?" or "what?"
An adverbial clause (adverb clause) is a word or expression in the sentence that functions as an adverb; that is, it tells you something about how the action in the verb was done. An adverbial clause is separated from the other clauses by any of the following subordinating conjunctions: after | although | as | because | before | if | since | that | though | till | unless | until | when |where | while
For example:
Adverbial clauses can also be placed before the main clause without changing the meaning.
For example:
Note - When an adverb clause introduces the sentence (as this one does), it is set off with a comma.
Adverb clauses answer questions like "when?", "where?", "why?"
An adjectival clause (adjective clause or relative clause) does the work of an adjective and describes a noun, it's usually introduced by a relative pronoun: who | whom | whose | that | which
For example:
This kind of clause is used to provide extra information about the noun it follows. This can be to define something (a defining clause), or provide unnecessary, but interesting, added information (a non-defining clause).
For example:
Information contained in the defining relative clause is absolutely essential in order for us to be able to identify the car in question.
A non-defining relative clause is separated from the rest of the sentence by commas. If you take away the non-defining clause the basic meaning of the sentence remains intact.
For example:
Adjective clauses answer questions like "which?" or "what kind of?"
An adjective clause functions as an adjective (modifies a noun or pronoun); an adverb clause functions as an adverb (describes a verb, adjective or other adverb); a noun clause is used as a noun (subject of a verb, direct object, indirect object, predicate nominative or object of the preposition).
Note : The difference between a clause and a phrase is that a phrase does not contain a finite verb.
Relative Clauses:
A relative clause follows the noun it modifies. It is generally indicated by a relative pronoun at the start of the clause, although sometimes you can tell simply by word order. The choice of relative pronoun, or choice to omit one, can be affected by the following:-
We make a distinction between an antecedent that is a human, who(m) and an antecedent which is a non-human, which.
Who(m) is used when the antecedent is a person.
That is used to refer to either a person or thing.
Which is used to refer to anything exept a person.
Note : Whom is not used much in spoken English.
Restrictive relative clauses are sometimes called defining relative clauses, or identifying relative clauses. Similarly, non-restrictive relative clauses are called non-defining or non-identifying relative clauses.
In English a non-restrictive relative clause is preceded by a pause in speech or a comma in writing, unlike a restrictive clause.
For example:
The builder who erects very fine houses will make a large profit.
This second example uses a restrictive relative clause. Without the commas, the sentence states that any builder who builds such houses will make a profit.
Restrictive | Non-restrictive | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Human | Nonhuman | Human | Nonhuman | |
Subject | who, that | which, that | who | which |
Object | who, whom, that | which, that | who, whom | which |
After preposition | whom | which | whom | which |
Possessive | whose, of whom | whose, of which | whose, of whom | whose, of which |
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There are several different types of noun:
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Prepositions - English Grammar
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They can be classified as simple or compound prepositions.
Simple prepositions are single word prepositions: across, after, at, before, between, by, during, from, in, into, of, on, to, under, with and without are all single word prepositions.
For example:
Compound prepositions contain more than one word. Ahead of and because of, are still prepositions even though they contain two words, and there meaning can be a bit more difficult to work out.
For example:
In front of, in case of, on behalf of , are also compound prepositions. They just happen to contain three words.
For example:
Their meaning can be less clear cut:
For example:
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A pronoun usually refers to something already mentioned in a sentence or piece of text. They are used instead of nouns to prevent repetition of the noun to which they refer.
One of the most common pronouns is it and it has no gender.
Singular | Singular | Singular | Plural | Plural | |
Personal Pronoun - Subject | I | you | he/she/it | we / you | they |
Personal Pronoun - Object | me | you | him/her/it | us | them |
Possessive Pronouns | mine | yours | his/hers/its | ours | theirs |
Reflexive Pronouns | myself | yourself | himself/herself/itself | ourselves | themselves |
Example (Singular):
Example (Plural):
Possessive Determiner / Adjective | my | your | his/her/its | our | their |
---|
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Verbs are a class of words used to show the performance of an action (do, throw, run), existence (be), possession (have), or state (know, love) of a subject. To put it simply a verb shows what something or someone does.
Most statements in speech and writing have a main verb. These verbs are expressed in tenses which place everything in a point in time.
Verbs have moods, which indicate the viewpoint of the verb, whether it is a fact, a command or hypothetical.
Verbs have a voice too. The voice shows whether the subject of a sentence is carrying out an action, or is having an action carried out on it.
Verbs are conjugated (inflected) to reflect how they are used. There are two general areas in which conjugation occurs; for person and for tense.
Conjugation for tense is carried out on all verbs. All conjugations start with the infinitive form of the verb. The infinitive is simply the to form of the verb For example, to begin. The present participle form (the -ing form), is formed by adding ing to the bare infinitive. For example, the present participle of the verb to begin is beginning. There are two other forms that the verb can take, depending on the tense type and time, the simple past form (began) and the past participle (begun).
Conjugation for person occurs when the verb changes form, depending on whether it is governed by a first, second, or third person subject. This gives three conjugations for any verb depending on who is acting as the subject of the verb. For example, we have: to begin, you begin, and he begins. Note that only the third conjunction really shows a difference.
While most English verbs simply do not show extensive conjugation forms for person, an exception is the verb to be.
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