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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Examines world literature produced in the context of colonialism and subsequent movements for independence. Links the study of literature to the political, psychological and cultural effects of imperialism and globalization. Specific topics vary according to faculty expertise and research interests.
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3.00 Credits
Examines literature in the context of film, the visual arts, and emerging new media. Emphasis on twentieth century and contemporary literary and aesthetic movements.
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3.00 Credits
The novel as a genre; exploration of the techniques of narrative, characterization, point of view, voice, reflexivity and others. May include texts from diverse national origins.
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3.00 Credits
This course offers focused study of both the history of feminist theory and contemporary developments in feminist theory. The course will cover both pre-modern ("proto") and modern ("first-wave") feminist works by women as well as explore contemporary ("second" and "third-wave") feminist theory. Specific course readings will vary from year to year.
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3.00 Credits
Special topics in fiction. Topics change each term. See department or instructor for specific topic.
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3.00 Credits
This course offers focused study of both the history of feminist theory and contemporary developments in feminist theory. The course will cover both pre-modern ("proto") and modern ("first-wave") feminist works by women as well as explore contemporary ("second" and "third-wave") feminist theory. Specific course readings will vary from year to year.
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3.00 Credits
The theory of functions of a real variable. Inequalities, sequences, rigorous discussion of limits, continuity, differentiability and Riemann integrals. Basic concepts of point set topology on the real line.
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3.00 Credits
Parts of the theory of complex variables that are prominent in applications of the subject. Topics covered: the algebra and geometry of complex numbers, Cartesian and polar representation, differentiability of complex functions, analytic functions, the elementary functions, contour integrals and the Cauchy-Goursat theorem, the Cauchy integral formulae, power series expansions, residue theorem. Offered concurrently with MAA 5404; graduate students will be assigned additional work.
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3.00 Credits
A classical real analysis course begins with a typological study of the real number line and includes the Holder and Minkowski inequalities, and other classical inequalities; metric spaces, open and closed sets, convergence, Cauchy sequences, completeness, continuity; normed spaces. The course also includes the Lebesgue integral on the real line, convergence results for sequences of functions. Students are expected to have been exposed to rigorous discussions of limits, continuity, differentiability, Riemann integrals, and basic concepts of point set topology on the real line.
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3.00 Credits
Several advanced topics in the theory of complex variables are covered including analytic functions, harmonic functions, Cauchy's theorem and integral formula, maximum modulus principle, Laurent series, singularities, and the residue theorem. The course objective is to present in a rigorous manner the parts of the theory that are prominent in applications of the subject.
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