ENG26-27 – Medieval English Literature in the Classroom

Course name

Medieval English Literature in the Classroom

University

UL

EC

5/6 EC

Course date

semester 2 (2026 - 2027)

Registration open until

26/10/2026 - 10/01/2027

Location

Utrecht (UU), Leiden (UL)

Instructor(s)

Dr. Thijs Porck (UL) & Dr. Marcelle Cole

Email course coordinator

Dr. Thijs Porck (UL)

Course objectives

Completing the course successfully, the student will:

  • Know how to translate current research in the field of medieval English literature and medievalism, specifically with regard to the particular themes in the modules, into a classroom setting (at either secondary school level or university level);
  • Know about the conditions of that research (methodologies, current debates, the individuals active in the field), and will be familiar with a number of sources that need to be consulted to conduct that research;
  • Gain experience in developing lesson and/or educational material that is based on academic insights into medieval literature;
  • Be able to formulate ideas about integrating medieval literature in modern teaching practice.

Course content

Medieval English Literature in the Classroom is suitable for students with an interest in Medieval English literature and medieval studies. It enables ambitious MA students to explore in depth an area in the field of medieval English Studies that may play a vital role in their future careers, as teachers, writers, translators, or researchers. This course will help students develop their own educational material, their abilities to incorporate academic scholarship into their teaching, to reflect critically on their findings, and to develop ideas about integrating medieval literature in modern teaching practice. Each year a different text or set of texts and themes from the Anglo-Saxon period or High Middle Ages will be selected. This course can be fruitfully combined with the Masterlanguage course Language Variation and Change: from Old English to Modern English in semester 1.

Despite its huge influence on modern politics, arts and culture, medieval English literature is rarely taught at secondary schools today. This course explores ways in which current research into medieval English literature can be translated to a classroom context.

This year, the course will focus on the Old English epic poem Beowulf (a world classic), the popular Middle English Romances about King Arthur as well as Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.

Prospective course outline

  • Session 1. Introduction: Why teach medieval English literature? How to teach history and culture of medieval England with modern adaptations (medievalism)?

Module 1. Beowulf

  • Session 2. Beowulf
  • Session 3. Teaching project: Beowulf

Module 2. Arthurian romances

  • Session 4. King Arthur
  • Session 5. Teaching project: King Arthur (student presentations)

Module 3. Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales

  • Session 6. Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales
  • Session 7. Teaching project: Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales

Educational perspective

The course is aimed at students who plan to teach medieval English literature in secondary schools and/or wish to develop educational material that can be used at university level.

Course requirements / Language proficiency

A basic knowledge of medieval English language and literature is highly recommended. Students who have not followed one or more preparatory modules must contact the course coordinator some weeks before the course starts for an alternative, online means to grasp the basics of Old English or Middle English literature.

Format

Seven 3-hour tutorials. While most of these will be offered online, a number of sessions will take place on campus.

Exam

Written assignment                  33 %

Teaching project (lesson plan in combination with an expository essay on relevant scholarship) counting for one third of the mark.

Written assignment                  33 %

Teaching project (lesson plan in combination with an expository essay on relevant scholarship) counting for one third of the mark.

written assignment                   33 %

Teaching project (lesson plan in combination with an expository essay on relevant scholarship) counting for one third of the mark.

UvA/VU 6 EC

Uva/VU students who need 6 EC (= 168 hours) may elect to do more homework or an extra assignment. This must be determined with the course teacher(s) in week 1.

Study load

5 EC = 140 hours, of which:

  • Seminars: 7 x 3 = 21 hrs
  • Preparation and work per week 7 x 8 = 56 hrs
  • 3 Lesson plans + research assignments 3 x 21 = 63 hrs

6 EC (= 168 hours), of which:

  • Seminars: 7 x 3 = 21 hrs
  • Preparation and work per week 7 x 8 = 56 hrs
  • 3 Lesson plans + research assignments 3 x 30,33 = 91 hrs

Schedule

Fridays 14:00 – 17:00

Data on campus:     19 February 2027 (Leiden); 26 February 2027 (Leiden); 12 March 2027 (Utrecht)

Data online:             5 March 2027; 19 March 2027; 2 April 2027; 9 April 2027

Background literature and course materials

David W. Marshall, ‘Introduction: The Medievalism of Popular Culture’, in Mass Market Medieval: Essays on the Middle Ages in Popular Culture, ed. David W. Marshall (Jefferson, 2007), 1-12.

E. L. Risden, ‘Medievalists, Medievalism, and Medievalismists: The Middle Ages, Protean Thinking, and the Opportunistic Teacher-Scholar,’ Studies in Medievalism 18 (2010): 44-54.

Valerie Krishna, The Alliterative Morte Arthure: A New Verse Translation (Lanham, 1983).Larry D. Benson and Edward E. Forster, King Arthur’s Death: the Middle English Stanzaic Morte Arthur and Alliterative Morte Arthure (Kalamazoo, 1994). (online).Sharon Kahn, the Stanzaic Morte: A Verse Translation of Le Morte Arthur (Lanham, 1986).

the Harvard’s Geoffrey Chaucer Website https://chaucer.fas.harvard.edu/

D. Brewer. 1968. Class-distinction in Chaucer. Speculum. Vol. 43 (1968), 290-305.

Mary Carruthers. 1979. “The Wife of Bath and the Painting of Lions”, PMLA 94 (1979), 209-22.

George Lyman Kittredge. 1912. “Chaucer’s Discussion of Marriage”, Modern Philology IX (1911-12), 1-13.

 

Set texts will be provided in the Digital Learning Environment.

Additional information

Students are highly recommended to also take the MasterLanguage course ‘Language Variation and Change from Old to Middle English’ (semester I, block 2) for 5/6 EC.