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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
A study of representative selections from 1500 to 1660 with concentration on non-dramatic literature.
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3.00 Credits
A study of selected poetry, prose, and drama from the ages of Dryden, Pope, and Johnson.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the attempts of journalists and novelists to create myths or moral models for their age in a series of social and cultural fictions. Readings in Addison and Steele, Johnson, Fielding, and Richardson.
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3.00 Credits
A study of representative selections from 1798 to 1832. Attention is given both to poetry and prose.
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3.00 Credits
A study of nonfiction prose writers such as Carlyle, Mill, and Arnold; and of poets such as Tennyson, Browning, and Arnold. Some assignments are made in the major novelists such as Dickens, Thackeray, and Eliot.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the major trends in poetry, drama, and the novel of the twentieth century. Emphasis is placed on themes, techniques, and social criticism. Representative British, Irish, and Commonwealth writers are included.
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3.00 Credits
Selections from works of Hopkins, Yeats, Eliot, Thomas, and others.
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3.00 Credits
A study of major American writers and literary movements, including such writers as Edwards, Franklin, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, Douglass, Dickinson, andWhitman, and such movements as Puritanism, the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Transcendentalism.
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3.00 Credits
A study of literary trends since the Civil War, with emphasis on such major figures as Twain, Crane, Dreiser, Frost, Eliot, Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Ellison, Lowell, Bishop, Baldwin, Rich, and Bellow and such movements as realism, naturalism, modernism, and postmodernism.
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3.00 Credits
A study of representative works designed to reflect formal developments in the novel, as well as intellectual and moral concerns of the American people.
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