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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course examines various theories, both ancient and modern, of how lyric poetry works to convey an emotion. The class will study lyrical moments, not only in poetry and song, but also in fiction, film, drama, essays, and photography. Students will also write lyrical pieces of their own and workshop them in class. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 2130 or ENG 2140 or ENG 2155. This course is offered every even-numbered spring. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This course examines various theories of how narrative structure works to convey meaning and make sense of the world. The class will study a range of narratives from fiction and poetry to history and clinical case studies. Students will also write narratives of their own and workshop them in class. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 2130 or ENG 2140 or ENG 2155. This course is offered every odd-numbered spring. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This class is a workshop in writing non-fiction and includes such forms as article, documentary, report, interview, essay, criticism, humor, profile, journal, how-to, personal narrative, review, and more. The course stresses both research and writing in a workshop setting. Student work-in-progress is critiqued through class discussion and frequent conferences with the instructor and fellow student writers. This course may be repeated once with permission but may be counted only once toward program requirements. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 2020 or permission. This course is offered every spring. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
The Bible as Literature features the study and discussion of the principal books of the Bible, while emphasizing the complexity of the Biblical text as literature, including the historical shaping of the canon, its literary traditions, languages, symbols, myths, and narrative forms. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. This course is offered every odd-numbered fall. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This course explores myth, folklore, and fairytales as manifestations and articulations of the cultures out of which they arise. The language and conceptual structures of these forms of cultural expression will be considered in terms of the ways in which the human imagination configures meaning and of the ways that "stories" articulate and reshape cultural beliefs, norms, and expectations. While the primary focus of the course will be classical mythology and the fairy and folk tales of the western tradition, we may also consider material from the African, Native American, and Asian traditions.Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. This course is offered every even-numbered fall. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
The instruction considers-both critically and historically-the tradition of the novel in England from the eighteenth to the twentieth century, as represented in works of major British novelists such as Defoe, Fielding, Austen, Bronte, Dickens,?Eliot, Conrad, and Woolf.Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. This course is offered every odd-numbered spring. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This course presents the American novel as an aesthetic form worthy of close study. The instruction examines representative works of such major American novelists as Hawthorne, Melville, Twain, James, Cather, Hemingway,?McCarthy, and Faulkner. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. This course is offered every even-numbered spring. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This seminar will explore a variety of literary and cultural genres, from epic poetry to short fiction to film and electronic media. This course may be repeated with a change of genre but may be counted only once toward program requirements. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This course explores issues related to gender constructs and identities from the point of view of Literary and Cultural Studies. Students explore and analyze the historical and cultural construction of gender as a concept and an artifact of culture, as well as the implications and consequences of such constructions. Prerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is sophomore standing. Credits: 3
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3.00 Credits
This course examines the literature and culture of England from the Old English oral tradition to the mid eighteenth century by exploring various themes and issues. Specific themes or issues that might be explored in any given semester include: "The Subject" (tracing the rise of early modern subjectivity), "Representing Women" (representation of and by women throughout the period), and "The Globe" (Shakespeare's theater and his world). This course may be repeated with a change of issue or theme but may be counted only twice toward program requiremPrerequisites & Notes The prerequisite is ENG 1052 or permission. ENG 2290 is recommended. This course is offered every fall. Credits: 3
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