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CL 121: Myth in Classical Literature
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This course introduces students to classical mythology through an examination of the diverse ways in which myth and legend are treated in the literatures of ancient Greece and Rome.Students read texts in English translation; knowledge of Greek or Latin is not required.Three credits.* May be taken to fulfill the core requirement in English literature.
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CL 121 - Myth in Classical Literature
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CL 123: Women in Classical Literature
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
The course explores the roles of women in ancient Greek and Latin literature through an examination of literary characterizations of women from a variety of genres, including epic poetry, tragedy and comedy.The emphasis of the course will be on the careful reading and analysis of primary texts in translation.Knowledge of Greek and Latin is not required.Three credits.* May be taken to fulfill the core requirement in English literature.
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CL 123 - Women in Classical Literature
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CL 132/222: The Roman Revolution
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This course presents a comprehensive study of the political, social, artistic, literary, and military transformation of Rome from the middle of the second-century B.C.through the reign of Augustus, with special attention given to Rome's response to the cultural and governmental challenges imposed by its growing empire and how its responses forever changed the course of Western civilization.Three credits.
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CL 132/222 - The Roman Revolution
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CL 203/103: Masterpieces of Greek Literature in English Translation
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This course surveys major works of ancient Greek literature with an emphasis on the content of this literature as a key to understanding classical Greek civilization and as meaningful in a contemporary context.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
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CL 203/103 - Masterpieces of Greek Literature in English Translation
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CL 221/121: Myth in Classical Literature
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This course introduces students to classical mythology through an examination of the diverse ways in which myth and legend are treated in the literature of ancient Greece and Rome.Students read texts in English translation; knowledge of Greek or Latin is not required.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
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CL 221/121 - Myth in Classical Literature
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CL 399: Capstone Project in Classics
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
Students completing an individually designed major in classical studies develop and carry out a major project that allows them to pull together the multiple threads of their interdisciplinary major.(Prerequisites: at least seven courses in the individually designed major) Three credits.
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CL 399 - Capstone Project in Classics
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CO 100: Human Communication Theories
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This course introduces major theoretical perspectives that inform communication scholarship.This foundational course for the major emphasizes understanding human communication as a symbolic process that creates, maintains, and alters personal, social, and cultural identities.Students critique research literature in the communication field in this course, which is a prerequisite for the 200- and 300-level communication courses.This course counts in the social and behavioral sciences core curriculum.Three credits.
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CO 100 - Human Communication Theories
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CO 101: Argument and Advocacy
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This introduction to public speaking and the advocacy process includes topic identification; methods of organization, research, selection, and arrangement of support materials; audience analysis and adaptation; patterns and fallacies of reasoning; uses of evidence; logical proof; and refutation.Students practice and critique informative and persuasive presentations in this course, which is a skill required in all 200- and 300-level communication courses.Three credits.
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CO 101 - Argument and Advocacy
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CO 130: Mass Media and Society
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
This media literacy course offers theoretical and practical tools to critically analyze media texts, as well as understand different ways in which audiences interact with them.Students will inquire into how the pervasive mediation of human experience through mass communication channels affects almost every aspect of socialization processes and people's symbolic environment.The interplay between structural constraints conveyed in media's messages and humans' capacity to exercise interpretive agency is addressed through lectures, audiovisual examples, hands-on activities, and a variety of assignments aimed at discerning the elements that intervene in the construction and reception of media texts, beyond their apparent components.This course counts in the social and behavioral sciences core curriculum.Three credits
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CO 130 - Mass Media and Society
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CO 200: Interpersonal Communication Theories
3.00 Credits
Fairfield University
An examination of one-to-one relationships from a variety of theoretical perspectives, this course focuses on the centrality of communication in building familial bonds, friendships, and work teams.Students examine factors influencing interpersonal communication such as language, perception, nonverbal behavior, power, status, and gender roles.(Prerequisite: CO 100) Three credits.
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CO 200 - Interpersonal Communication Theories
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