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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years) Poetry workshop stressing invention, production, revision, and peer as well as selfevaluation of poems and their production. Class presentations and discussions of works-in-progress.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years) Fiction workshop stressing invention, production, revision, and peer - as well as selfevaluation of short stories and their production. Class presentations and discussions of works-in-progress.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: COM 110 and ENG 102W with C or better. Techniques of information gathering and writing techniques for the media will be studied in a workshop style through frequent practical lab exercises. Introduction to standard journalism style, basic editing, public relations writing and elements of design. (Cross-listed as COM 265W)
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. A study of representative literature from outside the western (Euro-American) canon; works studied may be from Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Caribbean, and from historically colonized and marginalized literatures of America (e.g. Native American, African-American). Works will be studied within their appropriate cultural, historical, and political context. All readings in original or translated English.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years) Study of mythology and selections from ancient Greek, Roman and Medieval writers: Homer, Plato, Greek dramatists, Virgil, and Dante.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years) Practice in preparing and producing short and longer reports, letters, memos, proposals, and producing a final, formal report. Analysis of document structure, organization, peer- and self-editing, incorporating graphics, mechanism and process description, oral presentations, and format/layout. Focus on the central issues of form and content, audience and reader impact. Attention to grammar, sentence structure, paragraphing, presentational logic, and mechanical conventions, but as emerging from a political context appropriate to technical documents.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. A writing workshop in academic discourse, designed to help students draft and revise original research articles, reviews and peer critique letters. Students will be required to review models of scholarly writing and submit articles to a professional publication or conference. We will also study the rhetoric of academic and public discourse, and the approaches to audience, identity and ethos taken by many modern rhetorical theorists.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 125, 221 and 222, or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years; may be repeated) The advanced and focused study of a particular period of American literature, providing the student the opportunity to engage in an in-depth study of an intellectual movement, an author's works, or a genre.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 125, 231 and 233, or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years; may be repeated) The advanced and focused study of a particular period of British literature, providing the student the opportunity to engage in an in-depth study of an intellectual movement, an author's works, or a genre.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENG 102W or consent of instructor. (Offered in alternate years; may be repeated) Readings in translation of representative European writers such as Camus, Cervantes, Chekhov, Flaubert, Goethe, Ibsen, Ionesco, Kafka, Montaigne, Rilke, and Tolstoi.
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