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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course examines readings in major figures in modern American poetry beginning with Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson in the 19th century. Poets from the 20th century include T.S. Eliot,W.C.Williams, Robert Frost,Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg. Contemporary poets, such as Sylvia Plath, Ann Sexton, Philip Booth, Adrienne Rich, Robert Pinsky and Etheridge Knight also are studied. Emphasis is on reading poems closely and articulating connections between authors. The distinctive qualities of American themes, verse forms and language are discussed. Prerequisite: one course from EN level 200; Every Other Year, Fall
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3.00 Credits
Readings by Langston Hughes, T.S. Eliot, Anderson and Hemingway are followed by extensive structural and thematic analysis of Faulkner's major writings. The course includes close reading of the texts and consideration of problems raised by various critical approaches. Novels include The Unvanquished, As I Lay Dying, Light in August, and Go Down, Moses. Prerequisite: one course from EN level 200; Every Other Year, Spring
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3.00 Credits
This lecture/discussion course examines realistic and naturalistic American fiction in the period from 1875-1925 with emphasis on the novel. Close reading of primary texts is supplemented by theoretical and critical essays.Writers include Twain, Henry James, Chopin, Norris, Stephen Crane, Howells,Wharton, Jewett and Wright. Prerequisite: one course from EN level 200; Every Other Year, Fall
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3.00 Credits
This course presents an intensive study of three of Joyce's major fictions: Dubliners, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and Ulysses. Emphasis is on close reading of the texts to examine structure, language, allusion, narrative point of view and themes. Secondary materials provide additional theoretical and critical perspectives. Prerequisite: one course from EN level 200; Every Year, Fall
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3.00 Credits
the literary period (realism); 2) the critical theory of each writer; and 3) the relationships between the men and women portrayed. Prerequisite: one course from EN level 200; Every Other Year, Spring
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1.00 Credits
Independent Study
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3.00 Credits
Topics, which are subject to change each year, include extensive and intensive study of a major author; of thematic, philosophic, or artistic patterns of major or minor authors; of a genre; or of a period. Oral presentations and discussions lead to a major paper. Open to senior English majors and, occasionally, select English minors. Every Year, Spring
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3.00 Credits
Senior thesis is open only for English majors who are candidates for honors in English. Candidates must be recommended by a member of the English faculty, who consents to serve as adviser for the thesis. This adviser and the student select two additional faculty to serve as a reading committee for the student's final thesis presentation. Every Year, All Courses offered as needed
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to the theory and practice of financial management. Topics include the uses and valuation of securities, the structure and purpose of capital markets, financial risk and investments, and corporate financial analysis and decision-making. Prerequisite: EC 111; Every Year, All
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to the theory and practice of investment analysis. Emphasis is on the uses, characteristic and valuation of fixed income securities, equities and derivatives in the global financial marketplace. Students are exposed to both classical and modern theories of evaluating and quantifying financial risk. Prerequisite: FIN 201; Every Year, Fall
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