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  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Odd Year This course is an introduction to Ethics and Moral Philosophy. It introduces students to the history of ethics, various ethical theories and concepts, and applies ethical theories to concrete situations and contemporary issues. The primary texts are philosophical, but students will also use literary examples, films, newspapers and magazines as the basis for their discussions. Students that receive credit for ECS457, Ethics cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Every Other This course pushes students to conceptualize the music industry as both a business and a site of creativity and individuality. To achieve this, students study the music industry in three ways: 1) theoretically, to grasp the concepts of commodification and creativity within the music industry; 2) practically, to understand the way that the industry functions as a business; and 3 ) ethnographically, to broaden their knowledge of industries in the United States and other parts of the world. At the end of the course, students will have a firm grasp of the global music industry, how it functions, and how they can better interpret its place within societies. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary and Cultural Studies, Lit and Cultural Studies Minor
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Even Year This course offers insight into the world of business from a variety of literary perspectives. By examining business as a theme in literature, studying evolving images of the business person, and exploring varying concepts of success, students have an opportunity to integrate the humanities and business dimensions of their undergraduate studies. Students that receive credit for ECS461, The Image of Business in Literature cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Varies Yearly Cycle: Varies The historical study of literature in often organized around movements, usually centering on a group of writers whose work shares several attributes and goals. This course examines one such movement or period in-depth. Possible offerings include Realism and Naturalism, Modernism and Post-modernism, and Gothic Literature. Students that receive credit for ECS462, Literature in a Historical Context cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Historical Mode of Thought, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Fall and Spring Yearly Cycle: Varies In this course we analyze literature within a cross-cultural intertextual framework. This course concerns the development of a genre in an international context possible themes include fantastic literature, utopian fiction, the detective novel. Courses often relate literature to corresponding artistic, social, and historical movements. Students that receive credit for ECS463, Studies in Comparative Literature cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Global Studies, International Focus, International Studies, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Fall and Spring Yearly Cycle: Varies This course examines in-depth the work of one writer or a circle of writers. Along with focusing closely upon the literature itself, students will study the writer from a number of perspectives. Accordingly, readings may include biography, autobiography, letters, literary theory, and critical reaction from readers of the past and present. Authors who have been featured recently in this course include William Shakespeare, Toni Morrison, Emily Dickinson, and Latin American authors. Students that receive credit for ECS464, Major Literary Figures cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Odd Year The purpose of this course is to address the diverse motivations behind women's productions of creative texts - novels, films, and essays. Students will consider a series of thematic and theoretical questions, especially considering the process of forming a gendered identity. More-over, students will discuss the ways in which this identity can be radically transformed and/or destroyed through a connection with the supernatural or the monstrous. Of particular importance to our study will be an engagement with the concept of the female/ feminist quest. In addition, students will focus on important feminist literary critical questions, such as the concept of a "lost female tradition" of writing. Students will question whether women write differently than men. And we will explore how women's diverse experiences influence their writings - a diversity that crosses social and economic class, sexual orientation, and ethnicity. Students who have received credit for ENG362 or ECS466, Women and the Creative Imagination cannot receive credit for LCS466. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought, Women's Studies Minor
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisite: LCS121 and sophomore standing Session Cycle: Fall Yearly Cycle: Even Year In this course, students will study comics and graphic novel as an art form with its own history and critical vocabulary. Autobiography, memoir, political documentary, and literary adaptation are a few of the new directions in the contemporary graphic novel. As a form of popular culture, the graphic novel raises cultural and historical questions that can be analyzed from a variety of perspectives. Possible authors include: Art Spiegelman, Alan Moore, and Marjane Satrapi. Students that receive credit in ECS468, The Graphic Novel cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Prerequisites: LCS370 or permission of the instructor Session Cycle: Spring Yearly Cycle: Annual Through regular presentation of their original writing, students gain a greater sensitivity to language and an appreciation of the imagination as a problem-solving tool. Outside readings of American masters and contemporary poets help students develop insights into their own work, as do exercises in formal poetry and the creation of a personal set of poetic standards. A final portfolio of original poetry is required. Students that receive credit for ECS470, Advanced Poetry Writing cannot receive credit for this course. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, English Concentration, English Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary Mode of Thought
  • 3.00 Credits

    Session Cyle: Varies Yearly Cycle: Varies This course studies the culture, history and literature of a country or an international city. It includes a 10 to 12 day research trip to the location. Students read relevant social history to root them in an understanding of the significance of particular literary and cultural artifacts and locations. The course includes a student-designed research project, which is conducted while studying abroad. The city of London, England, and the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland have been studied in this course. Expenses for the study abroad portion are in addition to the tuition for the course. Prerequisites are formal application approval and faculty permission as well as sophomore standing and LCS121. 3.000 Credit Hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Study Abroad College of Arts and Sciences Undergraduate Division English and Cultural Studies Department Course Attributes: Cultural Mode of Thought, English & Cult. Studies, English & Cult. St.udies Minor, Liberal Arts Elective, Literary and Cultural Studies, Lit and Cultural Studies Minor, Literary Mode of Thought
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