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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Examines in depth selected writers from the Revolution to the Civil War, with a special focus on the struggle to define an "American" literature. Includes such authors as Brown, Irving, Poe, Douglass, Jacobs, Dickinson, Melville, Hawthorne, Whitman and Stowe.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Examines in depth the major writers that emerge at the turn of the century and the social and literary movements associated with them - including realism, naturalism, regionalism and the "New Negro" and women's movements. Includes such writers as Twain, Chesnutt, Hopkins, Wharton, James, Chopin, Crane, Norris and Dreiser.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Studies of issues and developments in English language drama from the Restoration to the present. Individual sections might be organized by themes, by period (i.e., Restoration or 20th-century drama), or by focusing on multiple works by playwrights such as Dryden, Behn, Farquhar, Shaw, O'Neill, Williams, Albee, Churchill, or Fugard.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Studies of issues and developments in the English-language novel. Individual sections might be organized by themes, by periods (Victorian or modern novels), or by focusing on multiple works by authors as diverse as Defoe and DeLillo, Richardson and Rushdie, or Melville and Morrison.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Studies in American literature from post WWII to the present. Includes authors such as Stein, Hemingway, Cather, Hurston, W.C. Williams, Faulkner, Cummings, Wright, Steinbeck, Plath, Morrison and Walker.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Study of African American literature as a distinct tradition beginning with the experience of enslavement and influenced by African and African American oral cultural heritage. Examines the emergence of a Black Aesthetic across many genres, including poetry, fiction, autobiography, sermons, speeches and criticism.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits Two courses in literature Study of the rich and varied literary tradition's roots in oral culture and its modern and contemporary expressions. Explores authors of diverse tribal affiliations and genres who address significant themes such as mixed-blood identity, reservation and urban life, the impact of near genocide, cultural preservation and resistance, and survival humor, among other topics.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits ENG 270 or Permission Variable topics: magazine article writing and marketing, extended literary journalism, history of journalism, print promotion and group publicity.
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2.00 - 6.00 Credits
2-6 credits Permission Application of concepts in language and writing through participation in journalistic, public relations and other work settings. Supervision by faculty and sponsoring organization. Includes interpretive journal and summarizing paper.
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4.00 Credits
4 credits ENG 190, 290 and Permission Advanced workshop in the art and craft of writing poems. In-depth critiquing of student and professional writing. Creating a chapbook of poems and giving a public reading.
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