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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Students join the staff of Chapman's newspaper to report and write stories. Training includes setting goals and responsibilities, making ethical and political decisions, and meeting deadlines. Graded on a pass/no pass basis. (Offered every semester.) 1-3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite, Written Inquiry. Students study and practice news gathering and reporting, emphasizing the development of writing skills. Assignments include finding news sources, using interviewing techniques, and writing acceptable news copy, feature stories, editorials, critical reviews, and personal interviews. The history, philosophy, ethics, and major criticism of the news media are covered. (Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite, Written Inquiry. Students study the fundamentals of design in newspaper and magazine journalism. Students examine the aesthetic components that create newspaper and magazine formulae: components of design, types of layout, photography and art, typography, and production stages. Students are expected to contribute to the design of a campus or community publication. Fee $75. (Offered fall semester, alternate years.) 1-3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite, Admission to the undergraduate program in Creative Writing. Students discuss, criticize, and evaluate the techniques of commercial, feature screenwriting (the screenwriting workshop) at the introductory level in order to produce a potentially marketable work. (Offered alternate semesters.) 3 credits..
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3.00 Credits
(Offered as needed.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
English 230 provides a general introduction to Shakespeare by considering representative tragedies, comedies, histories, and romances. Designed for those without extensive prior knowledge, this course gives students a historical, literary, and theoretical understanding of Shakespeare's dramatic works. English 230 does not count toward the English major. Majors should take ENG 430 or 432. (Offered fall semester.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an overview of some of the major texts of the western literary tradition. Readings may include The Odyssey, The Aeneid, Metamorphoses, the Bible, The Inferno, The Decameron, and Don Quixote. ( Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides a brief survey of the major texts and traditions of British literature, from its beginnings to about 1800. Students will read works from the Anglo-Saxon to the Restoration eras, with attention to constantly changing aesthetic, literary, and cultural contexts. (Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
This survey introduces a wide range of literature written in Great Britain between 1789 (when Blake published Songs of Innocence) and the present. An enormous amount of important work was written over these two centuries, and they span four major periods: Romantic, Victorian, Modern, and Post Modern. (Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the construction of "America" and the "American" in U.S. literature and culture from the seventeenth century to the present. Beginning with colonial writers, the course surveys such literary movements and genres as Transcendentalism, Slave Narratives, American Realism and Modernism, the Harlem Renaissance, and contemporary Postmodernism and Multiculturalism. (Offered every semester.) 3 credits.
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