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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Exploration of literature written by women within its social, historical, and theoretical contexts. Topics such as renaissance and medieval women writers, nineteenth century novels by women, feminist theory and criticism, contemporary poetry by women.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 2100 or permission of department head Exploration of literature written by women within its social, historical, and theoretical contexts. Topics such as renaissance and medieval women writers, nineteenth century novels by women, feminist theory and criticism, contemporary poetry by women.
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3.00 Credits
Thematic approach to African American Literature, with emphasis on historical, philosophical, and/or cultural contexts. Topics such as religion, migration, the oral tradition, autobiography, popular culture, rhetoric, civil rights, slavery, sexuality or literary theory. May be repeated for additional credit when topics change.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 2100 or permission of department head African American literature, with emphasis on historical, philosophical, and cultural contexts. Topics such as the oral tradition, autobiographies, the Harlem renaissance, literary criticism and theory.
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3.00 Credits
Writing by Black women. Topics may include race, class, and gender; history and society; literary and social criticism; political discourse; or Black feminist theory.
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3.00 Credits
Writing by Black women. Topics may include race, class, and gender; history and society; literary and social criticism; political discourse; or Black feminist theory.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the literature of the American south in its distinctive social and aesthetic contexts.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 2100 or permission of department head Southern literature in its distinctive social and aesthetic contexts.
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3.00 Credits
An exploration of the origins and development of the novel as a distinct literary form, examining the aesthetic, philosophical, and social concerns that inform selected works from the eighteemth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The course may focus primarily on the American or the British novel, or it may integrate the two through a specific thematic focus.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 2100 or permission of department head An exploration of the origins and development of the novel as a distinct literary form, examining the aesthetic, philosophical, and social concerns that inform selected works from the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries. The course may focus primarily on the American or the British novel, or it may integrate the two through a specific thematic focus.
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