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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Studies the Romantic Movement in England (1784 to 1837), its cultural and historical contexts, and major tendencies of thought. The course focuses on the primacy of the imagination in Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, and Keats. It also focuses on the sensibility of the English Romantic Movement through other poets and prose writers, such as Lamb, Hazlitt, DeQuincy, and Mary Shelley. Prerequisite: EN101 with a grade of C or better. (Offered on regular rotation.) 3 credits
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Studies the major British poets and prose writers from 1837 to 1901, their cultural and historical contexts, and major tendencies of thought. The course focuses on the religious, political, and social concerns of the period in such authors as Hopkins, Carlyle, Mill, Ruskin, Arnold, and Newman. It also examines selections by the major poets-Tennyson, the Brownings, and the Rossettis-and the major novelists- Dickens, Thackeray, the Brontës, George Eliot, and Hardy. Prerequisites: EN101 with a grade of C or better. (Offered on regular rotation.) 3 credits
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Studies the major British and Irish poets, dramatists, and prose writers from 1890 to the present. Students read selections from major figures, such as Conrad, Hardy, Shaw, Yeats, Synge, Lawrence, Forster, Woolf, Orwell, Eliot, Joyce, Auden, Beckett, and Amis, plus authors of other nationalities such as Atwood. Students also study changes in the form of the novel and poetry and examine representations of the political, social, and sexual revolutions and issues of decadence and disease. Prerequisite: EN101 with a grade of C or better. (Offered on regular rotation.) 3 credits
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Studies major American Romantics with emphasis on Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, and Thoreau. The course places these writers within the context of British Romanticism and American cultural and philosophical history. Prerequisite: EN207 or permission of the instructor. (Offered on regular rotation.)
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Focuses on the beginnings and development of the realistic and naturalistic mode of fiction in American literature, with emphasis on Twain, James, Howells, Crane, Wharton, Dreiser, and/or Norris. The course examines as well the cultural context within which these works were created. Prerequisite: EN208 or permission of the instructor. (Offered on regular rotation.)
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Analyzes selected works of 20th and 21st century world authors in English or in translation with attention to innovations in literary form and theme. Students consider the interplay of texts and their cultural or multi-cultural contexts. Prerequisite: EN101 with a grade of C or better. (Offered on regular rotation.) 3 credits
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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3.00 Credits
Covers a number of contemporary critical movements, including Marxism and feminism and the criticism of popular culture. The seminar allows students to pursue critical study of a literary work, a selected author, or a literary theme or topic. Students work with their advisors to develop and write a thesis that incorporates critical thinking, research, and literary analysis (Offered on regular rotation) 3 credits
Prerequisite:
( EN101) OR ( EN101H) OR ( EN101TR)
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2.00 Credits
Prepares students for the kinds of writing in English 100, elsewhere in the College, and beyond. The course focuses primarily on the importance of context, purpose, and process, and includes instruction in the paragraph and the short essay; it also includes Writing Center experience. A grade of C or better in EN099 is required to register for EN100. (Offered on regular rotation)
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3.00 Credits
Comprehensive survey of the major components that constitute the field of Environmental Sciences. Covers the introductory aspects of environmental sustainability, ecosystems, populations, resources pertinent to air, water, mineral, energy, soil, and food issues, toxic and waste issues, quality of life, and environmental ethnics. Prerequisites: MA111, CH150. Two hours of lecture and one three-hour laboratory. (Offered Spring Semester.)
Prerequisite:
( MA111 AND CH150)
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3.00 Credits
This course will examine theory, application, methodology and instrumentation used in the sampling and analysis of environmental contaminants. Students will be provided with opportunities to gain knowledge, experience, and skills in many of the following areas as well as other closely related fields: water pollution, air pollution, industrial wastes, solid waste management, site assessment, water treatment, municipal/industrial wastewater treatment. Prerequisites: BI150, CH150 Course Fee: $50.00
Prerequisite:
( MA108) OR ( MA201)
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