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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Introduces students to imaginative literature in several genres, including, for example, fiction, poetry, and drama. Stress will be both on appreciation of the aesthetic and cultural value of reading literature and on understanding the process of reading sensitively and intelligently. 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A disciplined introduction to the reading of poetry, English and American. (F,W). 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A disciplined introduction to the reading of short stories and novels, English and American. (F,W). 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Internet/E-mail All Sections for this Course Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A disciplined introduction to the reading of plays, English and American. (F,W). 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A study of the literature of English from the Anglo-Saxon era to 1660, including Chaucer and Milton, designed to introduce students to important authors, works, and literary movements in their historical contexts. Also designed ot introduce students to the various ways of writing about literature. Although ENGL 235 is continued in ENGL 236, either course may be elected by itself. 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A study of the literary history of England from the Restoration to the 20th century, designed to introduce students to important authors, works and literary movements in their historical context. Also designed to introduce students to various ways of writing about literature. Although ENGL 236 is a continuation of ENGL 235, either course may be elected by itself. 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A survey of American literature from the Colonial period to the early 20th century, designed to expose students to major American authors, works, and literary movements. Topics covered include Puritanism, the literature of the American Revolution, American Romanticism, Transcendentalism, the 19th-century poetic tradition, Realism and Naturalism, early 20th-century poetry and prose, and 20th-century social fiction. Also designed to introduce students to various ways of writing about literature. 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
This course in an introduction to Arab American literature, its historical and cultural contexts and contemporary relevance. Topics will include the literary and cultural productions of Arab immigrants, their transnational vision, and explorations of such concepts as home, memory and identity; the literary, dramatic and poetic responses of Arab American writers to 9/11 and the ongoing the war on terror; the role Arab American literature in offering different versions of Arab and Arab American lives and experiences from the one circulated in mainstream media, Hollywood cinema and culture. 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
A study of African-American literature designed to expose students to important periods, works, and authors within historical context. Topics will include slavery, reconstruction, the Great Migration, the Harlem Renaissance, and the contemporary renaissance in Black women's literature. Students will be required to read, critically discuss, analyze, and write their responses to several literary genres that will be incorporated (fiction, drama, poetry). 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce students to the development of world cinema by integrating the aesthetics of film with its technology, and its social and economic milieu. It will train the students in analyzing the formalist qualities of the medium, and in understanding the evolution of its various genres and styles. (YR). 3.000 Credit hours 3.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture Literature,Philosophy&Arts Department Course Attributes: Lower Division
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