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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Courses focusing on a specific question or theme, but offered at an introductory level, such as autobiographical myth, politics of women of color, Greek drama, multiculturalism or specific authors. May be repeated for credit if topic varies.
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3.00 Credits
Topics ordinarily not included in period and genre courses, such as literature and exile, writing and film, etc. May be repeated for credit if topic varies.
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3.00 Credits
A theoretically grounded introduction to a variety of computer tools and environments, to the resources of the Internet and to online scholarly communities interested in rhetoric, literature and/or communication. Concepts such as authorship, textuality and "reality" examined in relation to emerging forms of computer-mediated communication; practice in these forms. For beginning and intermediate computer users; requires only basic prior knowledge of computers.
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3.00 Credits
Provides multiple approaches to the analysis of texts, ideology and discourse. A variety of theoretical viewpoints presented, with coverage of such major schools of interpretation as formalism, post-structuralism, feminism, Marxism and ethnic studies.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the basic problems and processes associated with globalization; explores globalization and Americanization of culture, relations between British and American imperialisms, and rise of consumer culture, globalism and colonialism throughout literary history, especially emphasizing their influence on literary, cultural and artistic production. Case studies from past and present, focusing especially on examples from literature, also including visual arts, music, video, film.
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3.00 Credits
Medieval romance, reading in the Middle Ages, Arthurian literature, love in the Middle Ages. May be repeated for credit if topic varies.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to Old English grammar and a study of selected Old English poetry.
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3.00 Credits
The various roles assigned to women in a broad range of "courtly," religious and realistic texts, including those written by women (such as Marie de France, Christine de Pisan, Julian of Norwich, Margery of Kempe), as well as those written by the "standard" authors of the period (such as Dante, Chretien, Chaucer, the Gawain-Poet).
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3.00 Credits
Shakespeare and his contemporaries, earlier 17th-century literature, Renaissance prose. May be repeated for credit if topic varies.
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3.00 Credits
Romantic literature, Victorian literature, 19th-century fiction. May be repeated for credit if topic varies.
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