CollegeTransfer.Net
Toggle menu
Home
Search
Search
Search Transfer Schools
Search for Course Equivalencies
Search for Exam Equivalencies
Search for Transfer Articulation Agreements
Search for Programs
Search for Courses
PA Bureau of CTE SOAR Programs
Transfer Student Center
Transfer Student Center
Adult Learners
Community College Students
High School Students
Traditional University Students
International Students
Military Learners and Veterans
About
About
Institutional information
Transfer FAQ
Register
Login
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
EN 266: The Russian Novel and Western Literature
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This comparative study of major Russian authors of the 19th century and their contemporaries in France, Germany, England, and America begins with short fiction and moves to novels such as Père Goriot, Crime and Punishment, A Hero of Our Time, and Madame Bovary .Russian writers include Pushkin, Gogol, Lermontov, Dostoevsky, Turgenev, and Tolstoy.Topics include the role of marriage and attitudes towards the family, urban versus rural existence - especially the role of the city - the fantastic in literature, narrative technique, and the development of 19th-century fiction.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits
Share
EN 266 - The Russian Novel and Western Literature
Favorite
EN 267: Modern British Literature
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
Students study Conrad, Joyce, Lawrence, and Virginia Woolf - writers who profoundly changed the shape of the novel, a change also reflected in the writings of Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene, George Orwell, and Aldous Huxley.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 267 - Modern British Literature
Favorite
EN 268: The Irish Short Story
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course examines the Irish short story, stressing its development from 1903, with the creation of a national literature in English, to the present.The course focuses on the deeply rooted oral tradition, the Anglo-Irish tradition, and the native Irish tradition.Topics include the Irish literary revival, Irish family life, and the Irish revolution as treated in the short story.Authors include George Moore, James Joyce, Liam O'Flaherty, Maria Edgeworth, Elizabeth Bowen, Edna O'Brien, Mary Lavin, Daniel Corkery, Frank O'Connor, Sean O'Faolain, and William Trevor.Students view several films includ ing Man of Aran, The De ad, and Michael Colli ns.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credit
Share
EN 268 - The Irish Short Story
Favorite
EN 269: Modern Irish Drama
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This introductory survey course in 20th-century Irish drama includes the plays of Sean O'Casey, J.M.Synge, W.B.Yeats, Lady Gregory, Samuel Beckett, Brian Friel, Theresa Deevey, Frank McGuiness, and Sebastian Barry.The course considers the work of Irish repertory theatre groups from the Abbey and Gate theatres of Dublin, the Lyric of Belfast, and the Irish Language Theatre of Galway.Students view videos from the Lincoln Center Performing Arts Library with renowned Irish performers such as Siobhan McKenna, Barrie Fitzgerald, and Jack McGowan and attend Irish plays performed at the Irish Arts Center and the Irish Repertory Theater in New York City.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 269 - Modern Irish Drama
Favorite
EN 270: Studies in American Literature
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course begins with a survey of the Puritan background to American literature and the writings of the early republic.The course emphasizes the early national period and the romantic phase in American literature leading up to the Civil War.Writers studied include Irving, Cooper, Melville, Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, and Whitman.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 270 - Studies in American Literature
Favorite
EN 271: The Frontier in American Literature
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
For the last five centuries, the frontier - understood as the place where humanity comes into contact with its apparent absence in the shape of alien beings and landscapes - has been the subject of some of the most lasting and powerful American stories.In this course, students concentrate on some of the major representations of the frontier produced between the 1820s and the present to learn how to recognize and talk about the position that the American western has occupied in our culture.Authors include Cooper, Twain, Cather, and McCarthy; filmmakers include Ford, Peckinpagh, and Eastwood.Formerly EN 385.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 271 - The Frontier in American Literature
Favorite
EN 272: Development of the American Short Story
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course traces the development of the American short story from its emergence in the literary-historical context of 19th-century America to its maturity in the 20th century.It explores most intensively the writings of Poe, Hawthorne, James, and Hemingway, but considers, as well, the contributions to the genre of Irving, Crane, and numerous other writers.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 272 - Development of the American Short Story
Favorite
EN 273: Irish-American Literature
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course examines the Irish voice in American literature during the past 200 years.Rooted in the 18th century, proliferating in the 19th, and flourishing in the 20th century, Irish-American literature is one of the oldest and largest bodies of ethnic writing produced by a single American immigrant group.The course focuses mainly on Irish-American writing of the 20th century, although a sampling of earlier works is also studied.The authors include Finley Peter Dunne, F.Scott Fitzgerald, Eugene O'Neill, John O'Hara, James T.Farrell, J.F.Powers, Edwin O'Connor, Maureen Howard, J.P.Donleavy, Peter Hamill, William Kennedy, Mary Gordon, Frank McCourt, Alice McDermott, and Dennis Smith.Formerly EN 373.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits
Share
EN 273 - Irish-American Literature
Favorite
EN 274: American Literature and the Environment
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course aims to explore the ways in which ideas about the physical, "natural" environment have been shaped in American literature.The course will survey a variety of important texts in this tradition and introduce students to the scholarly perspective known as "Ecocriticism." Texts may include those by Austin, Cather, Leopold, Muir, Silko, Thoreau.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credit
Share
EN 274 - American Literature and the Environment
Favorite
EN 275: Victorian Poetry and Poetics
3.00 Credits
Eastern Connecticut State University
This course examines the poetry and theories of poetry posited by Victorian men and women who explored concepts of identity vis-à-vis Victorian notions of culture, religion, science, politics, and sexuality.Beginning with Arnold and ending with Wilde, the course covers both poetry and literary movements such as Pre-Raphaelitism, Decadence, aestheticism, and symbolism.Formerly EN 367.(Prerequisite: EN 12 or equivalent) Three credits.
Share
EN 275 - Victorian Poetry and Poetics
Favorite
First
Previous
121
122
123
124
125
Next
Last
Results Per Page:
10
20
30
40
50
Search Again
To find college, community college and university courses by keyword, enter some or all of the following, then select the Search button.
College:
(Type the name of a College, University, Exam, or Corporation)
Course Subject:
(For example: Accounting, Psychology)
Course Prefix and Number:
(For example: ACCT 101, where Course Prefix is ACCT, and Course Number is 101)
Course Title:
(For example: Introduction To Accounting)
Course Description:
(For example: Sine waves, Hemingway, or Impressionism)
Distance:
Within
5 miles
10 miles
25 miles
50 miles
100 miles
200 miles
of
Zip Code
Please enter a valid 5 or 9-digit Zip Code.
(For example: Find all institutions within 5 miles of the selected Zip Code)
State/Region:
Alabama
Alaska
American Samoa
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Federated States of Micronesia
Florida
Georgia
Guam
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Marshall Islands
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Minor Outlying Islands
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Northern Mariana Islands
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Palau
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virgin Islands
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming
American Samoa
Guam
Northern Marianas Islands
Puerto Rico
Virgin Islands