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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Guided workshop in poetry and creative prose, including short fiction and life writing. This course introduces and emphasizes the basic elements of creative writing across genres: narrative, image, and voice among them. Limited enrollment. Prerequisite: ENG 101 and 102. Course may be repeated for credit (as topic changes) for a maximum of 6 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Guided writing of non-fiction, with an emphasis on developing a clear, coherent style.
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3.00 Credits
Poems, short stories, novels, and plays with an appeal for young people in grades 7-12.
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3.00 Credits
Close study of selected texts by a single figure (e.g. Shakespeare, Chaucer, Austen) or comparison of texts by a pair of writers (e.g. Barrett Browning and Dickinson). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
This course combines study of major scholarship on writing-center theory and practice with firsthand observations of tutoring sessions, followed by direct tutoring experience. It is intended for prospective and practicing Harbert Writing Center tutors, as well as for non-tutoring students who expect to teach writing during their careers. Prerequisites: ENG 101, 102, 231, 232 or equivalents, or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Study of the formal and generic features of drama. May emphasize development of dramatic form and content, a group of writers (the Irish Literary Revival), a period (Elizabethan and Jacobean), or a sub-genre (tragedy). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Study of the forms and conventions of poetry. May emphasize a poetic kind (the lyric, the dramatic monologue, the elegy), a group of writers (Pope and his circle), a period or culture (contemporary Caribbean poetry), or a recurrent theme (country and city). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Study of the formal and generic features of the novel. May emphasize the origins and development of the novel, a group of writers (contemporary African-American novelists), a period or culture (novels of the American South), or a sub-genre or kind (the Bildungsroman or picaresque). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Study of the formal and generic features of the short story. May emphasize the origins and development of the short-story form, a group of writers (Latin American "magical realists"), or a period or culture (Southern Gothic). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Study of various forms of non-fiction prose (biography, autobiography, diaries and other forms of personal writing, journalism, polemical writing, the essay, etc.). Prerequisite: ENG 300 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
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