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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 or 4 Once a year Literature and culture of Europe and America in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Periodically This course explores works by 'writers of color' and investigates the notion of assigning racial, ethnic, and cultural identity labels to works of literature. Does literature have a color Can it How is this relevant to literary study In a cross-cultural context, we will examine how works of literature reflect the history and discussion of race, ethnicity, and culture in a given society. These works also participate in and give form to issues and debates that extend beyond the work back into society at large.Prerequisite(s)/Course Notes: Same as AFST 193.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Once a year Western European literature in the second part of the 19th century.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Periodically Advanced discussion of literary analysis, literary history and literary theory. Topic varies according to semester and professor. Substantial research paper is required. This seminar is open to senior majors and minors, and to qualified advanced junior students by permission. Students need to have completed the majority of their course work for the major before this seminar, which satisfies the Senior Essay requirement of the major. Prerequisite(s)/Course Notes: Note: CLL 196, 197, 198 satisfy the same major requirement.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 or 4 Once a year Modern man as he appears in representative works of contemporary European literature.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Periodically Critical review and analysis of various literary genres including novels, short stories, diaries, memoirs and poems. Both universal and Jewish implications of the tragedy are examined. Prerequisite(s)/Course Notes: No credit for this course or JWST 30. (Formerly JWST 30.)
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Fall Near Eastern mythology, the Bible and Greek literature focusing on our earliest attempts to order reality and formulate our individual identity.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Spring Roman and Christian writers and the medieval literature of England, Germany, Italy, France and Spain as the sources of western consciousness emerging from Judaic, classical and Christian views of reality.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Periodically Selected readings in the ancient Greek and Latin novels in English translation, with focus on the origins of the genre, cultural and historical context, questions of sex, gender, and identity, and the relationship between culture and empire.
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3.00 Credits
Semester Hours: 3 Periodically Study of the origin and development of Greek and Roman comedy, the particularities of ancient dramatic presentation, and the changing role of comedy in ancient society. Readings from plays of Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus, and Terence, supplemented by readings from other ancient authors and some comparative material from postclassical drama.
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