200

ENGL 200-209 Topics in Writing

Credits

3.0 - 4.0

ENGL 202 Topics in Writing: Intermediate Expository Writing

Prerequisite: ENGL 100 or 3 credits from ENGL 110-139. May not be taken on an audit basis. Intensive practice in the clear and effective exposition of ideas, with stress on organization and precision of word choice. Individual conferences in addition to class meetings.

Credits

3.0

Offered

Fall Semester

ENTH 205 Introduction to Playwriting

Prerequisites: Open to students who have completed the Composition Requirement. This class is an introduction to the art of playwriting and focused on developing a reliable process for student writers as they move from creative conception to completed dramatic script. It is designed for students with previous experience as well as those with minimal experience. All students will expand their conception of artistic possibilities by discussing the shorter plays of many significant playwrights as well as these writers' thoughts about their own processes for creation and playwriting.

Credits

3.0

Core

Art/Visual & Performing

Offered

As Needed

ENGL 210 Approaches to Literature

Prerequisite: ENGL 100 or 3 credits from ENGL 110-139; by invitation of the department. A team-taught introduction to literary criticism for students considering an English major. Each member of the English department faculty presents a work of literature and leads a discussion from a critical vantage point; our perspectives may include formalist, feminist, psychological, mythopoeic and new historicist analysis.

Credits

3.0

Offered

Spring Semester

ENGL 219 Creative Writing

Prerequisite: ENGL 100 or 3 credits from ENGL 110-139; or permission of the instructor. May not be taken on an audit basis. An introduction to various forms of creative writing, this is an intensive writers’ workshop requiring active participation from all members. Individual conferences in addition to class meetings. May not be audited.

Credits

3.0

Offered

Both Semesters

ENGL 221 World Literature

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above.  A study of world literature in translation particularly relevant to our own cultural heritage. Readings are drawn from the antique, classical, medieval and early modern periods, and typically include Homer, Sophocles, Virgil, Dante, Ariosto and Cervantes. (H1,CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall Semester

ENGL 222 British Literature through the 18th Century

Prerequisite: ENGL 100 or 3 credits from ENGL 110-139. Selected readings from the medieval period to the beginning of cultural divergence between England and America. Readings from Beowulf, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Swift, Defoe and others. (H1)

Credits

3.0

Offered

Fall Semester

ENGL 223 American Literature

Prerequisite: ENGL 100 or ENGL 101 or 3 credits from ENGL 110-139. An introduction to the American imagination as expressed in fiction, poetry, essays, autobiography and nature writing. May include works by Wheatley, Franklin, Hawthorne, Thoreau, Douglass, Twain, Wharton, Faulkner, Hurston, Hughes, Updike, Momaday and Brooks. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Offered

Spring Semester

ENGL 229 History of Drama Theatre I

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This course will examine the history, development, literary devices, and production values of a variety of theatre and drama, from Ancient Greece and Rome to the nineteenth century. Playwrights studied may include Sophocles, Aristophanes, liturgical dramatists, commedia performers, Shakespeare, Jonson, Chikamatsu, Molière, Sheridan, Tyler and Daly. (H1, G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall Semester

ENGL 230 History of Drama and Theatre II

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This course will examine the history, development, literary devices, and production values of a variety of theatre and drama, from nineteenth century Realism to the present day. Playwrights studied may include Ibsen, Wilde, Chekhov, O’Neill, Miller, Williams, Albee, Beckett, Pinter, Shepard, Mamet, Wilson and Kushner.(H2, G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall Semester (Even Years)

ENGL 232 (Re)Writing the Popular

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This course explores how "literature" overlaps with "popular culture." We will consider several stories that have captured imaginations across boundaries of time and genre and examine the conventions, expectations, and possibilities of different genres and media. (CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Spring Semester (Odd Years)

ENGL 237 Young Adult Literature

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition are of the core with a grade of C- or above. In this course, we’ll explore the history, themes, and styles of Young Adult Literature as well as its place in American classrooms and pop culture. We will also work to develop a critical, reflective understanding of what makes YA lit unique (or not), worthy of reading and teaching (or not), and why it appeals (or not) to teens and adults.

Credits

3.0

Core

Literary Analysis

Offered

As needed (Even Years)

ENGL 250-269 Thematic Studies

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. May be repeated with a different topic. A study of a significant theme or subject in selected works of literature. May be repeated with different topic.

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Both semesters

ENGL 250 Thematic Studies: Avatars of the Past: Narratives of Rome & Britain

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. In this course, we will explore how "history" and "fiction" are defined, where they overlap, and where they (should) diverge. The focus will be on ancient Rome and late medieval/early modern England, as well as figures that have come to represent these societies in the modern imagination: Julius Caesar, King Richard III, and Queen Elizabeth I. (H1, CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 252 Thematic Studies: The Modern Wasteland: Death & Rebirth in 20th Century English Literature

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of major works of modern English literature with an emphasis on the social, psychological, and religious implications of the notion that modern life is a spiritual wasteland, a dead land calling out for rebirth. Texts may include works by Conrad, Yeats, T.S. Eliot, Joyce, Lawrence, Woolf, Forster, and Auden. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 257 Thematic Studies: The Romantic Impulse

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. Romantic motifs in English literature of the nineteenth century. Readings will include both novels and poems. Texts may be selected from works by Scott, Bronte, Blake, Byron, and Wordsworth. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 258 Thematic Studies: The Victorian Mind

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of major themes in Victorian literature with emphasis on the impact of the industrial and scientific revolutions on society, religion, and art. Texts may include novels by Dickens or Eliot, essays by Mill, Carlyle, and Arnold, and poems by Tennyson, Browning, and Arnold. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 259 Thematic Studies: Medieval Magic & Mysticism

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This reading-intensive course explores how magic and mysticism were woven into the fabric of medieval society. We will consider the categories of magic, religion and science, and attempt to discover where they intersect and where they diverge. We will also look at how medieval articulations of magic survive and continue to influence the popular culture of today. (H1, CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 261 Thematic Studies: American Transcendentalism & Dark Romanticism

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of the major authors and themes of the American Transcendental and Anti-Transcendental or Dark Romantic movements. Texts will include essays by Emerson and Thoreau, novels and short stories by Hawthorne, Melville, and Poe, and poems by Whitman and Dickinson. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 262 Thematic Studies: Writing on Art

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of ekphrastic writing, or literature on, about, or inspired by works of art. The course will be geared toward an interdisciplinary exploration of the relationship between literature and the visual arts. Texts will include a range of classical to contemporary works by authors such as Homer, Keats, Wilde, Woolf, Auden, and Ashbery. (H2,CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

AFEN 265 Thematic Studies: African American Voices before the 20th Century

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above.  We will study the ways in which early African-American literary traditions have been formed not only by slavery, but also by community, geography, politics, and literature itself. Works may include slave narratives of Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, Elizabeth Keckley, and Harriet Jacobs, as well as 19th century fiction by Harriet Wilson, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Charles Chesnutt. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall Semester (Even Years)

AFEN 266 Thematic Studies: The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond: 20th Century African American Literature

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This course explores the influences of blues, jazz, and spirituals; folklore; and socio-economic history on African American literature of the 20th and early 21st centuries. We’ll examine how survival and resistance become art forms in the work of authors like W.E. B. DuBois, James Weldon Johnson, Zora Neale Hurston, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison. (H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall Semester (Odd Years)

ENPL 267 Thematic Studies: Vice and Virtue

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. Through analysis and discussion of selected works of great literature, students will examine themes of vice and virtue. Topics may include the relation between individual and community, evil, ends and means, the good life, and moral conflict.(H2, CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As Needed

ENGL 269 Thematic Studies: Arthur: The Once & Future King

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. This course will focus on the legend of King Arthur, the mythical King of the Britons who (it is said) will return to help his people in their hour of need. From the earliest mentions of Arthur in the chronicles and myths of post-Roman Britain through the films, novels, and television of today, we will explore key points in the development of the Arthurian legend. (CT)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 270-289 Genre Studies

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. May be repeated with a different topic. A study of a particular genre, such as the novel, the short story, poetry, drama or autobiography

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Both semesters

ENGL 272 Genre Studies: The Short Story

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. Students will read, discuss, and write about a wide-ranging selection of short stories, studying authorial and historical technique, point of view, voice, structure, and subject matter. (H2,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 273 Genre Studies: Renaissance Drama

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. We consider plays written by contemporaries of Shakespeare and his heirs. We will study dramatic traditions (such as revenge tragedy and social comedy) and theatrical contexts in the light of Elizabethan and Jacobean culture. The playwrights include Christopher Marlowe, Ben Jonson, and John Webster. (H1,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 275 Genre Studies: American Novel

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. An introduction to the development of the American novel from the late eighteenth century through the twentieth century. May include works by Rowson, Hawthorne, Melville, Harriet Wilson, James, Chopin, Cather, and Plath. (H2,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 277 Genre Studies: English Renaissance Poetry

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. We explore the major poetic traditions of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. The sonnet, mythic/erotic narratives, religious lyric, and pastoral are among the many forms and conventions considered in the readings. The poets studied include Sidney, Shakespeare, Donne, Herbert, Herrick, and Marvell. (H1,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 278 Genre Studies: The Woman in the Poem

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of twentieth century American poetry by and about women. The class will emphasize close analysis of particular texts by poets such as Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, and Anne Sexton. (H2,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 280 Genre Studies: 20th Century Ethnic Narratives

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. How do we add our own stories to the palimpsest of American identity? In this course, we will explore how national and personal histories of ethnicity in the United States are handed down, revised, and contradicted in both autobiography and fiction. Authors may include John Okada, Sherman Alexie, Jamaica Kincaid, Toni Morrison,Cynthia Ozick, and others. (H2, G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 281 Lost and Found: Moral Challenges in Modern Fiction

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition requirement of the core with a grade of C- or above. The course considers modern novelists who challenge their readers with moral problems. Their narratives include questions about the conscience, the soul, doubt, faith, good, evil, and even the existence of God. (H2,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Fall (Odd Years)

ENGL 282 Genre Studies: Forms in Poetry

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of the forms and techniques of poetry, including both critical analysis and creative practice. We will read and analyze a variety of poetic forms, including sonnets, sestinas, ballads, villanelles, prose poems, and pantoums, by modern and contemporary poets. In addition to close readings of poems, students will write original poems in various forms. (G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 283 Genre Studies:Modern American Poetry

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of the richly various poetry produced in the United States during the first half of the twentieth century. The course will focus on modern American poets such as Robert Frost, T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop. (H2,G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 284 Genre Studies:Medieval Romance: Audacious Knights, Daring Deeds and "Virtuous" Maidens

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. We will explore the development of the romance as a literary genre. Included in our investigation are societal influences on the texts and literary influences on society: how did authors use the genre to depict and interrogate ideals of gendered behavior in love and war? And how do these ideals continue to influence our society today? (H1, CT, G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 285 Genre Studies:The British Novel

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. Explores British novels as sites of ongoing experimentation and development. Moves from the genre’s 18th century hybrid origins, to the romance and realist traditions of the 19th century, and into the modernist and postmodernist movements of the 20th and 21st centuries. Authors may include Swift, Sterne, Austen, Dickens, Hardy, Woolf, Ishiguro, and McEwan. (H2, G)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

As needed

ENGL 286 Genre Studies: African American Poetry

Prerequisite: Completion of the Composition area of the core with a grade of C- or above. A study of the richly varied tradition of African American poetry from the eighteenth century to the present. The course will focus on the work of poets from the Enlightenment and antebellum eras, the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Arts Movement, and the contemporary period. (G, H2)

Credits

3.0

Core

Literature

Offered

Spring Semester (Even Years)

ENGL 299 Special Topics

Offered at the discretion of the department. An opportunity for groups of eight or more students to study topics suggested by their special interests and those of the faculty and not included in the regular offerings.

Credits

1.0 - 3.0

Offered

As needed