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ENG 112: Introduction to Literature- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
Introduction to literary genres and the tools of literary interpretation and criticism promoting reader understanding and enjoyment. Recommended as preparation for upper-division literature courses. A writing-embedded course.
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ENG 225: Introduction to Literary Studies- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
This course provides English and foreign language majors with an introduction to literary research and literacy theory, applying both to specific works of literature. It also provides students with an introduction to effective use of the academic library and of online resources as a part of the research process. It exposes students to classical and contemporary theories of literature underlying the acts of reading and interpreting. Required of English majors; optional for foreign language majors. Can be taken concurrently with a 300-level English course.
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ENG 290: Directed Study-credit arranged
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
Directed Study-credit arranged
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ENG 290 - Directed Study-credit arranged
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ENG 311: Advanced Writing- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
The writing and editing of various kinds of essays in a workshop setting, plus an examination of the writing process itself and the reading of fine essays.
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ENG 320: Anglo- Saxon and Medieval Literature- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
In modern jargon the term "medieval" often hasderogatory connotations. We use this adjective to describe something hyperbolically old-fashioned or disconnected from our everyday lives. In short, the Middle Ages were frequently seen as what we are not-what we are different from. In many ways, this course will adopt this theme of difference as a central focal point as we explore the heroism of Beowulf, the fantastical magic contained in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, and the miracles depicted on stage in the Play of the Sacrament. However, we will also consider the connections that we have with the texts written between the Anglo-Saxon period and 1500 as we analyze the first autobiography written in English (by a woman), The Book of Margery Kempe, explore depictions of poverty in Piers Plowman, and think about the role of violence contained in medieval saints' lives. In addition to the above texts we will read Chaucer, perform some mystery plays, and engage with other poems, prose, and drama from this formative period. (Also listed as PCS 320.)
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ENG 320 - Anglo- Saxon and Medieval Literature- hrs
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ENG 323: Chaucer- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
What happens when a woman with five husbands, a man too drunk to sit on his horse, and a hotel manager with a gambling streak get together Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. This course will introduce you to the above characters in addition to a gallery of equally colorful and unforgettable men and women in Chaucer's writing. Wending our way alongside these chatty narrators we will COURSE DESCRIPTIONS English - 185 take frequent rest stops to survey the terrain of Chaucer's late medieval English world and his own reading list of literary sources. In addition, we will look ahead and try to figure out what it is about Chaucer's writing that has proved to be so influential for so long. Like the many different characters that populate Chaucer's texts, our questions about them will be numerous and varied as we examine issues such as gender, language, violence, religion, science, exploration, economics, and nation-building.
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ENG 323 - Chaucer- hrs
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ENG 324: Renaissance British Literature hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
Readings from the greatest playwrights, poets, and prose writers of the British Renaissance, set within a framework of the changing ideas and fascinating cultural tapestry of the period. Authors studied include More, Marlowe, Spenser, Jonson, Shakespeare, Webster, Donne, Wroth, Herbert, Lanyer, and Milton.
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ENG 325: Eighteenth Century British Literature: The Age of Disguise
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
Readings in the fiction, poetry, drama, and essays of the wittiest, most pungently satirical and most artfully artificial era in all of British literature (1660-1770), plus an examination of the cultural background. Works by Dryden, Behn, Wycherley, Congreve, Pope, Finch, Astell, Manley, Swift, Gay, Fielding, Johnson, Burney, Haywood, Barker, and others.
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ENG 326: Shakespeare: Representative Plays- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
Introduction to Shakespeare's works including analysis and discussion of several of the comedies, histories, and tragedies with attention given to the cultural background and the interesting particulars of the Elizabethan theater.
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ENG 326 - Shakespeare: Representative Plays- hrs
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ENG 330: Dante's Divine Comedy- hrs
3.00 Credits
University of Portland
A study of Dante the pilgrim's journey through the realms of hell, purgatory, and heaven in search of Beatrice- "the one who will makehim happy" -with commentary and satirealong the way on the state of his times (medieval Florence and Italy), which are a distant mirror of our own, the need for justice, and the nature of true love, A study, also, of Dante's Vita Nuova, the book that records how Dante came to write the Comedy. (Also listed as PCS 330.)
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