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ENGL 0410G: Literature and Revolutions, 1640-1840
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Key developments in British and American literature understood in relation to the historical and cultural forces that produced the English Revolution, the American Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Industrial Revolution. Readings in major writers such as Milton, Paine, Blake, Wollstonecraft, Emerson, Barrett Browning, and Dickens, and in some of their non-canonical contemporaries. Focus on the emergence of a transatlantic literary culture. WRIT
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ENGL 0410H: Mariners, Renegades, and Castaways: American Fiction and the Romance of the Sea
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Examines one of the most distinctive of literary genres: the sea novel. Ostensibly stories of mystery and adventure, these texts are also meticulous accounts of working life at sea. Reads a number of well-known and lesser known American tales of the sea, including Poe's The Adventures of A. Gordon Pym, Melville's Moby-Dick, London's The Sea-Wolf, and Crane's "The Open Boat."
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ENGL 0410H - Mariners, Renegades, and Castaways: American Fiction and the Romance of the Sea
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ENGL 0410I: The Literature and Politics of Friendship
1.00 Credits
Brown University
Considers changing concepts of friendship as a key to major developments in British and American literature from the Renaissance through the 19th century. Special attention given to the ways the literary history of friendship intersects with leading political questions of the day. Shakespeare, Donne, Milton, Defoe, Wordsworth, Keats, Percy and Mary Shelley, Dickens, Poe, Melville, and Henry James.
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ENGL 0410I - The Literature and Politics of Friendship
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ENGL 0410J: The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course will explore various conceptions of personal identity, with an emphasis on Romanticism. We'll read Anglo-American philosophical and literary texts (mostly poetry) from the Renaissance through the 19th century, taking some excursions into contemporary theory (queer, feminist, post-structuralist). Writers will include Shakespeare, Montaigne, Locke, Hume, Rousseau, Wordsworth, Keats, Emerson, Browning, and Wilde.
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ENGL 0410J - The Literature of Identity from Shakespeare to Wilde
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ENGL 0410K: The Transatlantic Novel: Robinson Crusoe to Connecticut Yankee
0.00 - 1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course reexamines the rise and development of the "American" novel by reading literary and cultural history across national boundaries. Its main areas of investigation include imperial fantasies of the New World, diasporic movements, race and slavery, and modern capitalist culture. Writers include Defoe, Behn, Crevecoeur, Susanna Rowson, Hawthorne, and Twain. Students should register for ENGL0410K S01 and may be assigned to conference sections by the instructor during the first week of class.
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ENGL 0410K - The Transatlantic Novel: Robinson Crusoe to Connecticut Yankee
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ENGL 0410L: Literature, Trauma, and War
1.00 Credits
Brown University
This course surveys many genres and periods in order to consider and think about two traditional kinds of literary responses to war--glorifying it, and representing its horrors. We'll examine texts by Homer, Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, Byron, Whitman, Hardy, Crane, Freud, Levi, Pynchon, and Sebald, among others; we may also screen one or two films. Open to undergraduates only.
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ENGL 0410L - Literature, Trauma, and War
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ENGL 0450: Introductory Seminars in the Enlightenment and Rise of National Literatures and Cultures
1.00 Credits
Brown University
First-year seminars limited to 20 students.
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ENGL 0450 - Introductory Seminars in the Enlightenment and Rise of National Literatures and Cultures
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ENGL 0450A: Hawthorne and James
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An introduction to a pair of writers whose work continues to shape our understanding of American literature and American identity. Focusing on much of their most important work, our aim will be to understand how their conceptions of the relationship between writing and history both complicate and complement each other. Limited to 20 first-year students. FYS LILE WRIT
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ENGL 0450A - Hawthorne and James
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ENGL 0450B: Lincoln, Whitman, and The Civil War
1.00 Credits
Brown University
An introduction to the literature of the American Civil War: Whitman, Lincoln, Melville, Stowe, and other autobiographical and military narratives.
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ENGL 0450B - Lincoln, Whitman, and The Civil War
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ENGL 0450C: Literature of The American South
1.00 Credits
Brown University
The South is as much a state of mind as a place on the map, and some of the major figures in American literature have contributed to the making of what we think of when we think of "the South." Explores the sometimes contradictory but always important meanings of the American South. Authors include Poe, Douglass, and Faulkner.
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ENGL 0450C - Literature of The American South
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