ENGL 1101/1102 or ENGL 1103 or their equivalents are prerequisites for all
English courses at the 2000 level or above.
ENGL 1100. English as a Foreign Language. (3)
Limited to students whose native language is not English who may
need additional preparation before beginning the required
first-year English composition courses. Does not count toward
an English major or toward the General Education requirement.
One may not register for ENGL 1100 before taking the English
Department's placement test for persons whose primary language
is not English. (Fall, Spring)
ENGL 1101. English Composition. (3) Extensive practice in and discussion of composition in various
forms, for different purposes, and for various audiences.
Students experience writing as a means of personal growth,
intellectual development, and communication. (Fall, Spring,
Summer) (Evenings)
ENGL 1102. Writing in the Academic Community. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 1101. Writing argumentation appropriate to
inquiry in an intellectual community. (Fall, Spring, Summer)
(Evenings)
ENGL 1103. Accelerated College Writing and Rhetoric. (3)
Prerequisite: Placement by the English Department. Accelerated
writing curriculum that fulfills the requirement for ENGL 1101
and 1102. (Fall)
ENGL 2014. Topics in Writing. (1-3) (W) Offers instruction and practice in special types of
writing, such as research or legal writing, that are not
included in other writing courses. In addition, some sections
may be designed for students who need strengthening of
composition skills, or may offer instruction in various aspects
of effective writing. ENGL 2014 may not be used toward
the requirements for the English major. The maximum hours of
credit allowed are six for ENGL 2014 or 2015, or for 2014
and 2015 together. (On demand)
ENGL 2015. Topics in Writing. (1-3) (W) Offers instruction and practice in special types of
writing, such as writing for publication (exclusive of poetry,
drama, and fiction), which are not included in other writing
courses. In addition, some sections may offer instruction in
various aspects of effective writing. Not more than three
hours of 2015 may be used toward the requirements for the
English major (and those three hours may not be used toward
fulfillment of the 12 hours of English language or composition
required for licensure in English). The maximum hours of
credit allowed for any student are six for ENGL 2015 or
2014, or for 2015 and 2014 together. (On demand)
ENGL 2050. Topics in English. (3) Designed to offer topics of general interest not included in
other courses. May be repeated for additional credit with the
approval of the English Department. Does not count toward the
English major. (Yearly)
ENGL
2090. Topics in English. (3)
Special topics not included in other
courses. May be repeated for credit as topics vary. Does not
fulfill general education writing goal. (On demand)
ENGL
2091. Topics in English – Writing Intensive. (3) (W)
Special topics not included in
other courses. May be repeated for credit as topics vary.
Fulfills general education writing goal.
(On demand)
ENGL 2100. Writing About Literature. (3)
Combined practice
in writing and study of literature, emphasizing writing
processes including revision. Must be completed before ENGL
3100 and other English coursework. Restricted to English majors
and minors and Education majors. (Fall, Spring, Summer)
ENGL 2101. Masterpieces of British Literature I. (3) An introduction to British Literature written before 1800.
The course also provides backgrounds in the society and culture
of the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Age of Reason.
(On demand)
ENGL 2102. Masterpieces of British Literature II. (3)
An introduction to masterpieces of British Literature written
since 1800. The course also provides backgrounds in the society
and culture of the Romantic, Victorian, and Modern periods.
(On demand)
ENGL 2103. Masterpieces of Modern Fiction. (3)
Readings in selected novels and short stories written since
1850. (On demand)
ENGL 2104. Major American Writers. (3) Introductory readings in six to eight authors,
approximately half from the 19th century and half from the 20th
century, both poetry and prose. (On demand)
ENGL 2105. Introduction to Poetry. (3) (W)
Representative poems and poets, drawn from several literary
periods that introduce students to several poetic genres, to
varied treatments of universal themes (such as love, death,
disappointment, joy), and to various ideas about poetic
imaginations. (Yearly)
ENGL 2106. Film
Criticism. (3) Introduction
to film as an art form. Emphasis will be on the critical
analysis of the form and the content of films with attention to
issues of visual narrative, audience, cinematography, editing,
acting, etc. (On demand)
ENGL 2108. Introduction to Drama. (3) (W)
Representative plays of the western world from the classical
period to the modern period to introduce students to drama as
literature, with consideration of staging, conventions of the
theater, types of drama, and dramatic theory. (On demand)
ENGL 2111. Introduction to Ancient World Literature I. (3)
Reading
of ancient world literature, in English translation. (Yearly)
ENGL 2112. Introduction to Modern World Literature. (3)
Readings in
modern world literature, in English and in English translation.
(Yearly)
ENGL 2116. Introduction to Technical Communication. (3) (W)
Technical Communication theory (such as organization, audience
analysis, and editing) is taught in the context of oral and
written formats, such as memoranda, proposals, and reports, and
includes formats and content common to students' own
disciplines. (Fall, Spring, Summer) (Evenings)
ENGL 2126. Introduction to Creative Writing. (3) (W)
This course introduces students to creative writing, including
both poetry and fiction writing, assuming little or no previous
creative writing experience. (Fall, Spring, Summer)
ENGL 2127. Introduction to Poetry Writing. (3)
An introductory
course for those with little experience in reading, writing, and
critiquing poetry. Students will read and discuss poetry in an
anthology and also be responsible for writing poems based on
assigned formal strategies or themes and for bringing them to a
workshop setting for group critique. (On demand)
ENGL 2128. Introduction to Fiction Writing. (3)
An introductory
course for those with little experience in reading, writing, and
critiquing fiction. Students will read and discuss short
stories in an anthology and also be responsible for writing
stories based on assigned formal strategies or themes
and bringing them to a workshop setting for group critique.
(On demand)
ENGL 2301. Introduction to African-American Literature. (3) Crosslisted as AFRS 2301. Prerequisites: ENGL 1101 and 1102 or
1103, or departmental permission. Survey of the major periods,
texts, and issues in African-American literature. Prerequisite
to 4000 level African-American literature courses in English
Department. (Fall, Spring)
ENGL 3050. Topics in English. (3)
Special topics not included in other courses. May be repeated
for credit as topics vary. Does not fulfill general education
writing goal. (On demand)
ENGL 3151. Topics in English – Writing Intensive. (3) (W)
Special topics not included in other courses. May be repeated for credit
as topics vary. Fulfills general education writing goal.
(On demand)
ENGL 3100. Approaches to Literature. (3) (W)
Introductory
study and application of major critical approaches to
literature, such as historical, psychological, mythological, and
formalistic. Required of English major and minor. (Fall,
Spring, Summer) (Evenings)
ENGL 3102. Literature for Young Children. (3)
Literature for children between the ages of two and seven.
Picture books, nursery rhymes, and storytelling techniques.
(Spring)
ENGL 3103. Children's Literature. (3)
Critical and historical study of children's literature,
including picture books, poetry, myth, fable, folk tale,
fantasy, and realistic fiction. Central to the course is the
development of critical principles for assessing the literary
merit of children's books. Other possible emphases: the creative
process, archetypes and values in the works studied, images of
childhood, children's responses to literature, and issues in
children's book selection. [ENGL 3103 and/or 3104 required for
English majors seeking intermediate teacher license.] (Fall,
Spring)
ENGL 3104. Literature for Adolescents. (3)
Introduction to
literature for adolescents. Emphases are: (1) critical analysis
and aesthetic judgment of literature; (2) study of
representative examples from all major genres (poetry, fiction,
and drama) as well as various subgenres (such as biography,
science fiction, fantasy, and contemporary realistic juvenile
fiction) that address the cognitive, emotional, and
psychological needs of junior high and high school students.
Students will practice applying these approaches to adolescent
literature and will employ these concepts in critically
selecting, evaluating, and judging books for adolescents. [ENGL
3103 and/or 3104 required for English majors seeking
intermediate teacher license.] (Yearly)
ENGL 3110. Literature and Science. (3) (W)
The works of scientists (such as Darwin, Freud, or Einstein) and
their influence on literature studied along with the role of
creativity, imagination, and communication in literature and
science. (On demand)
ENGL 3112. Medieval British Literature. (3)
Representative works (excluding those of Chaucer) written in
Britain during the Middle Ages, especially the epic and romance,
mainly studied as reflections of the medieval individual's
relationship to God, society, and other individuals. An
introduction to the earliest British literature as it evolved
from pagan folklore under the influence of myth, fantasy,
courtly convention, the new religion, foreign invasion, and
transformations in language and culture. Most of the works
studied in this course will be read in modern English. (On
demand)
ENGL 3114. British Prose and Poetry of the 16th Century. (3)
Major works of the Renaissance "Golden Age," including Sidney,
Marlowe, Shakespeare (excluding drama). Included are satire, the
pastoral romance in prose, and the many new poetic forms that
continue to the present day, such as the sonnet and blank verse.
(On demand)
ENGL 3115. The Earlier 17th Century. (3)
Major writers
from Bacon and Donne to the Restoration. (On demand)
ENGL 3123. Wit and Sensibility: 18th‑century British Literature. (3)
Poetry and prose in the golden age of satire, with emphasis on
Dryden, Pope, Swift, and Johnson. Early Romantic trends in the
poetry of Young, Grey, and Collins. (On demand)
ENGL 3125. The Romantic Era, 1785‑1832. (3)
The development of the Romantic movement, with emphasis on the
works of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and other major poets. (On
demand)
ENGL 3126. The Victorian Era to 1870. (3)
Readings in British literature of the middle of the 19th
century, reflecting such cultural developments as the rise of
industrialism and technology, England's global empire, the
rapidly changing nature of society, the religious crisis, and
the beginnings of artistic and literary revolt against the
establishment. (On demand)
ENGL 3127. British Literature from 1870 to World War I. (3)
Readings emphasizing such cultural and literary developments as
realism and the impact of science, art for art's sake, problems
of religious faith and of sexuality, moral and political issues
relating to colonialism, British imperialism, and new techniques
in art and literature. (On demand)
ENGL 3128. British Literature Since World War I. (3) Readings reflecting developments such as the decline of
Britain as a world power, the intellectual disillusionment
following World War I, the impact of psychological and social
theory, and literary innovation and experimentation. (On
demand)
ENGL 3132. Introduction to Contemporary American English. (3) Introduction to the study of word formation, the sound system,
and the structure of contemporary American English, including
characteristics and applications of traditional grammar.
(Fall, Spring)
ENGL 3140. Colonial and Early American Literature. (3)
Origins of
American literature, from Colonial times to Washington Irving,
including such authors as Edwards, Taylor, Franklin, Crevecoeur,
Freneau, Brown. (Alternate years)
ENGL 3141. American Literature of the Romantic Period, 1820‑1870. (3)
Important writers and ideas of the period of American
romanticism, from Irving through Whitman, including such authors
as Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville. (Yearly)
ENGL 3142. American Literature of the Realistic and Naturalistic Periods,
1870‑1920. (3)
Important writers and ideas of American literature from Whitman
through the period of World War I, including such authors as
Dickinson, Twain, Howells, James, Crane, Dreiser, Frost. (Yearly)
ENGL 3143. Modern American Literature, 1920 to Present. (3)
Important writers and ideas of modern American literature,
including such authors as Faulkner, Eliot, Hemingway, Cummings.
(On demand)
ENGL 3156. Native American Indian Literature. (3)
Introduction to American Indian Literature, ranging from oral
traditions through contemporary writers. (On demand)
ENGL 3300. American Literature Survey. (3)
This course surveys the whole of American literature from the
Colonial to the Modern period. Major authors and literary
movements, as well as important ideas and cultural issues will
be addressed. Required of English majors. (Fall, Spring,
Summer, Evenings)
ENGL 3301. British Literature Survey I. (3)
This course
surveys British literature from the Medieval period to the
Renaissance. Major authors and literary movements as well as
important ideas and cultural issues will be addressed. Required
of English majors. (Fall, Spring, Summer, Evenings)
ENGL 3302. British Literature Survey II. (3)
This course surveys British literature from the Neoclassical to
the Modern period. Major authors and literary movements, as
well as important ideas and cultural issues will be addressed.
Required of English majors. (Fall, Spring, Summer, Evenings)
ENGL 3852. Independent Study. (1-3)
Prerequisite: Consent of the Department. Individual
investigations and appropriate exposition of the results.
(Unless special permission is granted by the Department Chair,
no more than six hours of 3852 may apply toward the English
major.) (Fall, Spring, Summer)
ENGL 4002. Women and Literature. (3) Selected topics focusing on women and literature, such
as images of women, women as writers, and women as literary
critics. With permission of the English Department, may be
repeated for credit as topics vary. (However, only six hours may
be used for the requirements for the English major.) (On
demand)
ENGL 4008. Topics in Advanced Technical Communication. (3)
Prerequisites: ENGL 2116 and COMM 1101. Exploration, both
theoretically and practically, of the interrelation of written,
oral, and graphic communication within technical rhetorical
contexts. May be repeated once for additional credit with the
approval of the English Department. (On demand)
ENGL 4050. Topics in English. (3)
Special topics not included in other courses. May be repeated
for credit as topics vary. Does not fulfill general education
writing goal. (On demand)
ENGL 4051. Topics in English – Writing Intensive. (3) (W)
Special topics not included in other courses. May be repeated for credit
as topics vary. Fulfills general education writing goal.
(On demand)
ENGL 4090. Major Authors. (3)
The works, ideas, and life of one to three significant authors.
With permission of the English Department, may be repeated once
for credit as long as different authors are considered. (On
demand)
ENGL 4102. Classics in British Children’s Literature. (3)
Prerequisite:
ENGL 3102 or 3103 or 3104, or departmental permission. Focuses
on pivotal works in the history of British and British Colonial
Children’s literature. (Fall)
ENGL 4103. Classics in American Children’s Literature. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 3102 or 3103 or 3104, or departmental permission.
Focuses on pivotal works in the history of American Children’s
literature. (Spring)
ENGL 4104. Multiculturalism and Children’s Literature. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 3102 or 3103 or 3104, or departmental permission.
Focuses on works that represent one or more kinds of cultural,
ethnic, or social diversity of the United States and other
national literatures. (Fall)
ENGL 4114. Milton. (3)
A study of the major poems and selections from the minor works
of Milton. (On demand)
ENGL 4116. Shakespeare's Early Plays. (3)
A study of 10
representative plays from the comedies, histories, and tragedies
written 1590‑1600. (Yearly)
ENGL 4117. Shakespeare's Late Plays. (3) A study of 10 representative plays from the period
1600‑1611, including the late tragedies and tragi‑comedies. (Yearly)
ENGL 4121. The 18th‑Century British Novel: Man, Woman, Manners, and Morals.
(3)
The novel as narrative form and as mirror of the individual in
society. Emphasis on fiction by Defoe, Richardson, Fielding,
Sterne, Austen, with further readings in the novel of manners
and the Gothic romance. (On demand)
ENGL 4122. The Victorian Novel. (3) Readings in British fiction during the triumph of the novel in
the19th century, emphasizing major developments in realism,
romance, naturalism. (On demand)
ENGL 4123. The Modern British Novel. (3) Representative British novels that embody the cultural
and literary developments of the 20th century: the impact of two
world wars, the influence of important psychological and
economic factors of modern life and their relationships to new
techniques in art and literature. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4124. Modern Irish Literature. (3) Readings in Irish literature since 1885, with
consideration of the mythology, folklore, and social history of
Ireland as they are expressed in poetry, drama, and fiction.
(On demand)
ENGL 4131. British Drama to 1600, Excluding Shakespeare. (3)
A survey of the development of British drama to 1600, with
representative plays from the Mystery‑Miracle Cycles, the
Morality Plays, and Tudor drama, including Lyly, Kyd, Marlowe,
Peele, Greene, Dekker. (On demand)
ENGL 4132. British Drama from 1600‑1642, Excluding Shakespeare. (3)
A survey of Jacobean and Caroline drama, including plays by
Jonson, Beaumont and Fletcher, Webster, Middleton, Shirley,
Ford. (On demand)
ENGL 4143. The American Novel of the 19th Century. (3)
Major novelists
and traditions from the beginnings of the American novel through
the rise of realism, including such novelists as Hawthorne,
Melville, Twain, Howells, James. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4144. The American Novel of the 20th Century. (3)
Major novelists and traditions from the emergence of naturalism
to the present, including such novelists as Crane, Dreiser,
Hemingway, Faulkner. (Yearly)
ENGL 4145. Literature of the American South. (3)
Selected works of Southern writers that reflect literary and
cultural concerns from Colonial times to the present, including
such authors as Poe, the early humorists, local color writers,
Chopin, Faulkner, Warren, O'Connor, Welty. (Yearly)
ENGL 4146. Contemporary Jewish‑American Literature. (3)
An introduction
to the scope and shape of the contemporary Jewish‑American
literary tradition. Such writers as Bellow, Malamud, Roth,
Singer, and Potok will be studied. (On demand)
ENGL 4147. Early Black American Literature. (3)
Prerequisite:
ENGL 2301. A survey of significant writings by Black Americans
before the Harlem Renaissance. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4148. Twentieth‑Century Black American Literature: Prose. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 2301. Intensive study of
selected black American 20th‑century writers of fiction and
nonfiction, beginning with the Harlem Renaissance. (Alternate
years)
ENGL 4150. Contemporary Poetry. (3) Poetry in English (including translations) since 1940. (On
demand)
ENGL 4151. Modern Drama. (3) Representative Continental, British, and American plays, from
Shaw to the present. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4152. Modern European Literature. (3)
Selected modern European authors, translated into English, whose
works have been of special interest to readers and writers of
British and American literature. (On demand)
ENGL 4153. Contemporary Fiction. (3) Selected present‑day fiction, with an emphasis upon
works from outside the United States and Britain. Works not
originally in English will be studied in translation. (On
demand)
ENGL 4155. Pan‑African Literature. (3) Introduction to significant Pan‑African literature,
emphasizing the oral tradition, selected works of major authors
in the Caribbean and Africa, and the relationships of these
traditions to American, British and other literary traditions.
Works not originally written in English will be studied in
translation. (On demand)
ENGL 4156. Gender and African-American Literature. (3) Crosslisted as AFRS 4106. Prerequisites: ENGL 2100 and 2301,
or permission of instructor. Exploration of the intersection of
gender and African-American literature, focusing on either Black
women writers or Black male writers, or a combination in
dialogue. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4157. African-American Poetry. (3) Crosslisted as AFRS 4107. Prerequisites: ENGL 2100 and 2301 or
permission of instructor. Intensive study of African-American
poetry, focusing on one period or traversing several.
(Alternate years)
ENGL 4158. African-American Literary Theory and Criticism. (3) Crosslisted as AFRS 4108. Prerequisites: ENGL 2100 and 2301,
or permission of instructor. History of an African-American
approach to literary analysis, including a practicum in modern
criticism. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4161. Modern English Grammar. (3) A study of the structure of contemporary English, with
an emphasis on descriptive approaches. (On demand)
ENGL 4165. Language and Culture. (3) Readings in and discussion and application of the
interrelationships between language and culture, including basic
introduction to contemporary American dialects and to social
contexts of language. (Yearly)
ENGL 4167.
The Mind and Language. (3)
Introduction to
the study of the mind from a linguistic perspective. Topics
include language growth and loss, language deficits, modularity
and hierarchical processing, the interaction of cognitive and
linguistic faculties, parsing/processing strategies and
limitations, and applications such as therapy, forensics,
computing, teaching. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4180. Theories of Technical Communication. (3)
Prerequisite:
ENGL 2116. Rhetorical, psychological, and anthropological
theories that underscore the interrelations of written and
graphic communication within technical, rhetorical contexts.
(Fall)
ENGL 4181. Writing User Documents. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 2116. Researching and analyzing
audiences to write publishable instructions. This includes the
production, testing, and revision of tutorials, reference
manuals and on-line documents for users of computers and other
devices. (Spring)
ENGL 4182. Writing and Designing Computer-based Documents. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 2116. Theoretical and practical exploration
of desktop publishing. Students will write and publish
camera-ready documents by rhetorically integrating text and
graphics using computer aids. (Fall)
ENGL 4183. Editing Technical Documents. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 2116. Document editing, including copy
editing, proofreading, substantive editing, and project
management. (Spring)
ENGL 4202. Writing Poetry. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 2126 or 2127, or permission of instructor.
Further study of and practice in the writing of poetry within a
workshop format. May be repeated once for credit with the
consent of the English Department. (Fall, Spring) (Evenings)
ENGL 4203. Writing Fiction. (3) Prerequisite: ENGL 2126 or 2128, or permission of instructor.
This course provides further study of and practice in the
writing of fiction within a workshop format. May be repeated
once for credit with the consent of the English Department. (Fall,
Spring) (Evenings)
ENGL 4204. Expository Writing. (3) (W)
Writing of essays, criticism, and various forms of
exposition. (Fall, Spring) (Evenings)
ENGL 4205. Advanced Expository Writing. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 4204. May be repeated once for credit with
permission of the English Department. (Alternate years)
ENGL 4208. Poetry Writing Workshop. (3)
Prerequisite: ENGL 4202. Designed for advanced writers
of poetry. Focuses primarily on student work and peer criticism
of it. May be repeated once for credit with permission of
Department. (Yearly)
ENGL 4209. Fiction Writing Workshop. (3)
Prerequisite:
ENGL 4203. Designed for advanced writers of fiction. Focuses
primarily on student work and peer criticism of it. May be
repeated once for credit with permission of Department. (Yearly)
ENGL 4211. Chaucer.
(3) The poetry of
Geoffrey Chaucer, including The Canterbury Tales and Troilus and
Criseyde. (On demand)
ENGL 4254. Teaching
English/Communication Skills to Middle and Secondary School
Learners. (3) Approaches to
the teaching of English, including recent theories and research
related to writing and literary study, with special attention to
technology. Designed primarily for teaching in grades 6-12.
(Fall, Spring)
ENGL 4260. History of the English Language. (3)
Origins and development of the English language, both spoken and
written, from its earliest forms to contemporary usage. (Yearly)
ENGL 4263. Linguistics and Language Learning. (3)
Readings in,
discussions of, and application of linguistically oriented
theories of language acquisition, directed toward gaining an
understanding of language‑learning processes and stages. (Alternate
years)
ENGL 4290. Advanced Creative Project. (3)
Prerequisite:
ENGL 4208 or 4209, or permission of the instructor. The
planning, writing, and polishing of a work of at least 20 pages
of poetry or at least 40 pages of fiction or creative
non‑fiction by advanced undergraduate or graduate students with
the guidance of a member of the Department's creative writing
faculty. The final work may be a single piece or a collection of
pieces and will evolve under the supervision of the primary
instructor. With permission of the Department, students who took
the course as undergraduates may repeat as graduate students. (On
demand)
ENGL 4400. English Composition Practicum. (1-3) (W)
Prerequisite:
Consent of the instructor. Through supervised tutorial
experience and seminars, this course introduces the student to
current developments concerning composition and to a variety of
methods for teaching English composition. This course is highly
recommended for those planning to teach or those currently
engaged in teaching. With permission of the English Department
may be repeated once for credit. (Fall)
ENGL 4410. Professional Internship. (3 or 6)
Prerequisites:
Permission of English Internship Coordinator. Restricted to
juniors and seniors minoring in English or Communications who
have at least a 2.5 GPA and a course in professional
communication (e.g. journalism, technical communication, public
relations, public relations lab, or mass media). Students work
8-10 hours (3 hours credit) or 16-20 hours (6 hours credit) per
week in a placement arranged by the Internship Coordinator. Only
three credit hours may be applied to the English major; three
additional hours may be counted as a University or
Communications elective. (Fall, Spring, Summer)
ENGL 4852. Independent Study. (1‑3) Prerequisite: Consent of Department. Individual investigations
and appropriate exposition of the results. (Unless special
permission is granted by the Department Chair, no more than six
hours may apply toward the English major.) May be repeated for
additional credit with approval of the English Department. (Fall,
Spring, Summer)
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