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E Lit 403: Black and White in American Drama
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
This course addresses the complex issue of race in America through the 19th and 20th centuries as dramatized by American playwrights, black and white. Authors include Countee Cullen, Lillian Hellman, Eugene O'Neill, Jean Toomer, Langston Hughes, and Arthur Miller. Prerequisites: junior standing, two 300-level courses or better.
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E Lit 404: Topics for Writers: Beckett
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Waiting for Godot, Happy Days, Krapp's Last Tape: these are but three of Samuel Beckett's revolutionary texts for theater. The complete canon of plays is examined for structure and compositional elements. Students undertake exercises in dramatic composition and perform a chamber presentation of Endgame. Course is intended for writers with some experience of the dramatic form. Intending students must interview with instructor in November.
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E Lit 404 - Topics for Writers: Beckett
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E Lit 405: Living Influences: Poets and the Poets Who've Shaped Them
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
This course examines a number of very contemporary collections of poetry (e.g. from first-book writers such as Karen Volkman and Greg Williamson, to more established writers such as Carl Phillips and Frank Bidart) to discover how generations of writers speak to and through one another. The course considers the nature and possible anxieties of writerly influence and how traditional and/or canonical writers' voices, verse, and vision have shaped a number of poets writing today. This class requires at least a basic knowledge of poetry in English up to the 1950s as we move freely among writers such as Ben Jonson, George Herbert, Gerard Manly Hopkins, and Emily Dickinson, as well as Pound, Eliot, Lowell, and Plath.
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E Lit 405 - Living Influences: Poets and the Poets Who've Shaped Them
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E Lit 407: Old English, Introductory
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Study of the Anglo-Saxon language and introduction to major prose and short poetry of the period. Prerequisites: junior standing and 6 units of literature.
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E Lit 407 - Old English, Introductory
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E Lit 408: Old English Literature
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Close study of some major literary texts (e.g.. Beowulf, the Exeter book) and major issues (e.g., Anglo-Saxon and Latin culture, traditions of heroic literature) of the Anglo-Saxon tradition. Prerequisite: E Lit 407 or permission of instructor.
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E Lit 408 - Old English Literature
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E Lit 410: Medieval English Literature I
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
No course description available.
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E Lit 410 - Medieval English Literature I
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E Lit 4101: Medieval English Literature II
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Topics course in Medieval English literature.
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E Lit 4101 - Medieval English Literature II
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E Lit 411: Old & Middle English Literature
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Early English literature from Beowulf and Anglo-Saxon poetry, in translation, through major works in Middle English of the 14th and 15th centuries, exclusive of Chaucer.
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E Lit 411 - Old & Middle English Literature
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E Lit 4111: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Same as Hum 4111
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E Lit 4111 - Interdisciplinary Studies in the Humanities
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E Lit 413: 17th Century English Literature: 1603-60
3.00 Credits
Washington University in St Louis
Selected readings in English literature from Donne and Jonson through Dryden.
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E Lit 413 - 17th Century English Literature: 1603-60
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