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ENG 202: Introduction to Journalism
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Students will explore important issues in print and broadcast journalism as well as in the writing techniques used in each medium. Students will study reportorial styles, newsgathering, research and interviewing skills, and put each into practice through regular submissions to the College newspaper, Le Provocateur. This course includes a combination of academic classroom learning and experiential learning in the community. (Offered each semester) Land/ Three credits
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ENG 202 - Introduction to Journalism
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ENG 209: Creative Writing
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
In this course, students will study the techniques used by published poets and fiction writers and will learn to employ some of these techniques by writing original poetry and fiction. We will also learn the critical language for discussing these genres in a more precise and meaningful way, and will have ample opportunity to develop our understanding of the formal characteristics of poems and stories by both published and student writers. (Spring) Hodgen/ Three credits
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ENG 209 - Creative Writing
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ENG 217: Introduction to Film Studies
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
In addition to providing students with a basic vocabulary with which to discuss and analyze film technique, this course offers the following variety of approaches to film criticism: formal/structural, generic, historical, viewer response, and gender. Consideration will also be given to ways of writing about film. (Fall) Land/ Three credits
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ENG 217 - Introduction to Film Studies
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ENG 219: Introduction to Media Analysis
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Designed to give students the means and opportunities to understand and analyze types and functions of mass media. Students will critically examine the evolution of mass media through active participation in discussing, reading, viewing, and writing about issues, such as media and ethics, politics and media, and ways in which we are informed, entertained, persuaded, and manipulated by means of media. The Writing Emphasis sections of this course will link weekly writing tasks to a research project and presentation. (Offered each semester) Murphy, DiBiasio/ Three credits
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ENG 219 - Introduction to Media Analysis
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ENG 220: Approaches to Reading And Interpretation
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
This writing emphasis course considers fundamental issues of textual interpretation, primarily but not exclusively in the print media. Representative readings, limited in number, will be chosen from a variety of genres and historical periods. In addition to adopting a critical vocabulary that will assist close reading of texts, the course also introduces the student to various interpretive strategies: formalist, historical, readerresponse, structuralist, and deconstructionist, among others. Required for all English Majors. ( Offered each semester) Beyers, Shields/ Three credits
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ENG 220 - Approaches to Reading And Interpretation
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ENG 221: Survey of British Literature: Beginnings to The 18th Century
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
A survey of English literature to the 18th century, concentrating on a selected number of core texts. Special emphasis on literary trends occurring, from Anglo Saxon Britain, Medieval, Renaissance, and 17th-century England, to Enlightenment 18th century. (Fall) Carella/ Three credits
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ENG 221 - Survey of British Literature: Beginnings to The 18th Century
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ENG 222: Survey of British Literature 19th Century to The Present
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
In this course we will survey major writers of the Neoclassic, Romantic, Modernist, and Contemporary eras, probing the ways in which their world views were conditioned by their times, examining the formal elements that enhanced their art, and coming to terms with how their works challenge us as readers. (Spring) Murphy/ Three credits
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ENG 222 - Survey of British Literature 19th Century to The Present
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ENG 223: Survey of American Literature: Beginnings to The Present
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
Participants in this course will read, discuss, and write about American literature from the 17th century to the present day. The focus of the course will be on literature as a form of rhetoric, that is, how literature contributes to the debate of key issues in American life. Writing assignments will invite students to explore the methods used by texts to persuade readers to accept a point of view and the ways in which texts connect to one another to create a national “conversation.”(Fall) Knoles/ Three credits
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ENG 223 - Survey of American Literature: Beginnings to The Present
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ENG 225: Literature of Social Responsibility:Community Service Learning
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
This course offers students a combination of academic classroom learning and experiential learning in the community. Students will read contemporary American fiction and sociological monographs and cultural analyses, using these ideas to think critically about political, economic, and social issues in the community. Melia, Murphy/ Three credits
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ENG 225 - Literature of Social Responsibility:Community Service Learning
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ENG 231: Introduction to Poetry
3.00 Credits
Assumption University
This writing-intensive course is designed to introduce students to poetry and poetics. A wide variety of poems will be used to address such issues as diction, imagery, rhythm, form, and genre. (Spring) Hyland/ Three credits
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ENG 231 - Introduction to Poetry
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