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ENGLISH 306WI
Advanced Composition
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Further study of writing for those who wish to continue the study beyond the two semesters of composition. Emphasis will be placed on translating critical thinking into effective writing. (NOTE: Students may not receive credit for more than one of the following: 305, 306, 403). Required of business and public administration majors.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 307WI
Language, Literacy, Power
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This course uses discourse analysis to investigate language and literacy. Students will explore how the discourses of institutional and cultural identities act as instruments of power and legitimacy.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 308
Rhetorics of New Media
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This course will focus on the rhetorical study of new media texts (such as hypertext, networked multimedia, multimedia art and performance, virtual spaces, and so on) and theories of new media. The course will consider the rhetorical possibilities and constraints of new media and critically examine their impact on democratic discourse and literacy in the public sphere. Specialized knowledge of multimedia equipment and software is neither expected nor required. Prerequisites Eng. 110 & 225, or equivalent.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 309WI
Rhetorics of Public Memory
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This course explores how museums and other cultural institutions function as rhetorical agents in creating and preserving public memory. Students will explore how processes of collection, arrangement, and visual display operate as modes of persuasion and make arguments about civic identities and community values.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 310
Introduction To Linguistics/Language Science
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This course is a comprehensive introduction to the theory, methodology, and applications of the science of language. It examines properties of human language, covers all branches of language science, and provides a foundation for a critical understanding of language issues. Required for ENGLISH 470; recommended for ENGLISH 320 and ENGLISH 330.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 311
American Literature I
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A survey of American literature and culture from its beginnings to 1865. This course will cover a range of authors, several genres, and culture forms, which may include fiction, poetry, drama, autobiography, oral, contact and/or slave narratives, folklore, and songs.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 312
Creative Writing I Fiction
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A course centered on the short story. Emphasis is placed on three areas: general principles governing the writing of fiction; practice in short fiction (primarily the short story, but including the novella); criticism; and technical skills (including editing and rewriting). Prerequisite: Concurrent enrollment in or completion of ENGLISH 213 or ENGLISH 214 or instructor's permission.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 313WI
Reporting
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A seminar of practical application in advanced reporting. Assignments to cover news events and to pursue in-depth news reports on the campus and off. Work is turned in on deadline and critiqued by the instructor.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 315
Creative Writing Poetry
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Writing and rewriting poems, with discussion of techniques needed to produce desired effects. Analysis and evaluation of student work. Examination of technical means utilized in selected poems by accomplished poets. Offered: Winter. Prerequisites: Concurrent enrollment in or completion of ENGLISH 215 or instructor's permission.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 316WI
Literary Nonfiction
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Literary Nonfiction is a writing intensive course in the reading and writing of nonfiction prose as a literary art. We'll survey the historical development of literary nonfiction (especially the essay), sample contemporary authors of the genre, write critical commentary on works we read, and compose personal essays of our own. The course is not exclusively a literary seminar nor a creative writing workshop, but seeks to mix and make connections between these modes, in the tradition of the essay itself.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 317
British Literature I
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A survey of British Literature and culture from its beginnings to the 18th century, including works by Chaucer and Milton.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 318
Bible As Literature
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A critical study of the major portions of the Old and New Testaments and the Apocrypha, with special attention to the development of literature from oral tradition, the literary genres, themes and archetypes represented in the collection, and the diction and style which have influenced later literature. Consideration also of the relation of Biblical literature to the historical, religious, and cultural milieu of the ancient Near East.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 319
Myth And Literature
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A study of classical myth including readings from Homer to Ovid, analysis of selected myths in later literature, art and music, and a study of contemporary definitions and approaches to myth.
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Credits: 3-4 hours
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ENGLISH 320
Structure Of English
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Not a remedial grammar course. Methods of linguistic inquiry and grammatical description. Study of traditional and modern schools of syntax, especially transformational grammar. Practice describing the structure of sentences. Application to the teaching of grammar in high schools.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 321
American Literature II
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A survey of American literature and culture from 1865 to the present. This course will cover a range of authors, several genres, and culture forms, which may include fiction, poetry, drama, autobiography, essay, lyrics, and film.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 323
Shakespeare
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An intensive critical study of William Shakespeare's writings in various contexts (historical, social, political, literary, contemporary, for example). Readings will encompass at least eight plays and will include at least one comedy, history, tragedy, and romance. Required of all English majors.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 324
Introduction To British Literature II
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A survey of British literature and culture of the Romantic, Victorian, and Modernist periods, this course will cover several genres including at least one novel from each period. Required of all English majors. Offered every semester.
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 325
Arthurian Legends
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Focusing on writers such as Marie de France, Chretien de Troyes, Sir Thomas Malory, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Sara Teasdale, Bernard Malamud, and Marion Zimmer Bradley, this course examines the legend of King Arthur and his Round Table as a recurring myth, repeatedly manifested in time through literature, art, history, music, and film. Prerequisite: None
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 326
Modern And Contemporary Irish Literature
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This course examines a range of texts written by Irish-born writers from the end of the nineteenth century on. While it is likely the course will include texts by the most famous Irish writers, such as Yeats, Joyce, Beckett, O'Brien, Heaney, and Friel, course materials will vary from semester to semester and may focus on a specific genre, historical period, or area of interest. Offered: On Demand
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Credits: 3 hours
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ENGLISH 327
British Literature II
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A survey of British Literature and culture from the late 18th century to the present. This course will cover a range of authors and genres, including at least one novel.
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Credits: 3 hours
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