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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Survey of the development of English syntax, morphology, and phonology from Old English to the present, with attention to vocabulary growth. (D)
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to the Old English language and a study of the historical and cultural background of Old English literature, including Anglo- Saxon and Viking art, runes, and Scandinavian mythology. Readings from Beowulf and selected poems and prose. (D)
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1.50 Credits
Study of the Divine Comedy as epic, prophecy, autobiography, and poetic innovation, relating it to antiquity, Christianity, Dante's European present (the birth of the modern languages and new intellectual and poetic forms), and Dante's own afterlife in the West. Also listed as HMN 361. (D)
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1.50 Credits
The completion of the course on the Divine Comedy as epic, prophecy, autobiography, and poetic innovation, relating it to antiquity, Christianity, Dante's European present (the birth of the modern languages and new intellectual and poetic forms), and Dante's own afterlife in the West. Also listed as HMN 362. P-ENG 307 or HMN 361, or POI. (D)
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3.00 Credits
Examines theological, philosophical, and cultural assumptions of the Middle Ages through the reading of primary texts. Topics may include Christian providential history, drama, devotional literature, the Franciscan controversy, domestic life, and Arthurian romance. (CD-Depending on topic covered.) (D)
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3.00 Credits
The origin and development of the Arthurian legend in France and England, with emphasis on the works of Chrétien de Troyes and Sir Thomas Malory. (D)
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3.00 Credits
The origin and development of poetic genres and lyric forms of medieval vernacular poetry. (D)
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3.00 Credits
Interdisciplinary investigation of poetry and song in the Middle Ages and early Renaissance. Study of the evolution of poetic and musical genres and styles, both sacred and secular. Students must complete a project or projects on the technical or theoretical aspects of early song. Students may not receive credit for both MUS 283 and ENG 313.(D)
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3.00 Credits
EDU 281. Public Life and the Liberal Arts. ( 3)
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3.00 Credits
A study of Virgil's Eclogues, Georgics, and selected passages of the Aeneid, and their influence on English literature, using translations and original works by writers of the sixteenth through the eighteenth centuries, including Spenser, Marlowe, Milton, Dryden, and Pope. Knowledge of Latin is not required. Also listed as CLA 259. (D)
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