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ENL 215U: World Literature
3.00 Credits
Carleton College
Selected great works of non-American/non-British literature with an emphasis on non-Western works in their social and historical contexts. Prerequisite: GES130 or GES145, 146.
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ENL 215U - World Literature
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ENL 241L: Modern Mythmakers
3.00 Credits
Carleton College
Consideration of how writers and filmmakers appropriate mythic structures and archetypes to create meaningful narratives of human experience. Modern mythmakers may include: J.R.R. Tolkien, George Lucas, Toni Morrison, C.S. Lewis, and others. Prerequisite: GES130 or GES145, 146.
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ENL 241L - Modern Mythmakers
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ENL 300: Modern American Poets: Their Voices and Visions
3.00 Credits
Carleton College
Individualized study of 13 representative modern American poets based on films produced by the New York Center for Visual History. This series explores the range and diversity of modern American poetry while focusing on each poet's unique craft, sources of inspiration, and distinct vision. Prerequisites: ENL204 or a Contemporary Western Life and Thought (L) course; consent of instructor.
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ENL 300 - Modern American Poets: Their Voices and Visions
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ENL 301: Chaucer and Writers of Arthurian Quests
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
Major emphasis on The Canterbury Tales and Arthurian literature. Medieval pilgrimage and the Grail quest, as treated by English and Continental authors.
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ENL 301 - Chaucer and Writers of Arthurian Quests
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ENL 303: Shakespeare:The Art of the Dramatist
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
Major plays in Shakespeare's distinct periods and genres: history, comedy, tragedy, and romance. Both literary and theatrical aspects are examined, with attention to historical context. Emphasis on performance.
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ENL 303 - Shakespeare:The Art of the Dramatist
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ENL 304: Milton and the 17th Century
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
Major emphasis on Milton's Paradise Lost and his other poems and prose, with readings in metaphysical and religious poetry of such writers as Donne and Herbert.
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ENL 304 - Milton and the 17th Century
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ENL 309: Society and Nature:From Classic to Romantic
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
British literature from Dryden, Pope, and Swift to Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley, and Byron. Emphasis on social and literary satire, Romantic nature poetry, the changing role of the imagination, and criticism by Johnson and Coleridge.
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ENL 309 - Society and Nature:From Classic to Romantic
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ENL 311: American Civil War Literature
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
Study of the American Civil War and its appeal to historical and literary imaginations. Selected wars are studied in historical context, including the causes, the course of the war, and the consequences of the war for the nation.
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ENL 311 - American Civil War Literature
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ENL 313: The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond
4.00 Credits
Carleton College
The massive migration north of African Americans after World War I resulted in a rich literary and artistic movement known as the Harlem Renaissance. Major African-American writers from this period through the Civil Rights era are studied, including: Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, W.E.B. DuBois, Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison, Alice Walker, and Toni Morrison.
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ENL 313 - The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond
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ENL 315G: Literature of the Oppressed
3.00 Credits
Carleton College
Literature that arises out of oppression. Explores oppression through the imaginative response of the oppressed. Typical historical foci include the Holocaust; totalitarianism; and the experience of African Americans, Native Americans, and women. Prerequisites: GES130 or GES145, 146; Contemporary Western Life and Thought (L) course or GES245; World Cultures (U) course.
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ENL 315G - Literature of the Oppressed
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